Archive for 2009

Book announcement: “Climate Change in the 21st Century” by Stewart J. Cohen with Melissa W. Waddell

8 December 2009

Understanding the world’s biggest crisis – and why it’s not just an environmental problem.

Climate Change in the 21st Century goes beyond climate modeling to investigate interdisciplinary attempts to measure and forecast the complex impacts of futureclimate change on communities, how we assess their vulnerability, and how we plan to adapt our society. The book explores the impact of climate change on different ecosystems as well as what the social and economic understanding of this phenomenon can tell us; it also links discussions of climate change with the global discourse of sustainable development.

  • Share/Bookmark

Oslo Summer School at University of Oslo, “Security and Environmental Change”, Lecturer: Professor Simon Dalby

8 December 2009

Oslo Summer School in Comparative Social Science Studies is taking place  July/August 2010. Several courses will be held, but the course
“Security and Environmental Change” by Professor Simon Dalby taking place 26 – 30 July will be of special interest to our community.

Online application will be available in January 2010 and the application deadline is 15th of May 2010.

  • Share/Bookmark

2010 International Climate Change Adaptation Conference

3 December 2009

The Climate Adaptation Futures Conference will be held 29 june -  1 July 2010 at the Gold Coast Convention Centre , Queensland, Australia. The conference will be one of the first international forums to focus solely on climate impacts and adaptation and it will bring together scientists and decision makers from developed and developing countries to share research approaches, methods and results.  It will explore the way forward in a world where impacts are increasingly observable and adaptation actions are increasingly required.

Abstracts must be received by January 18, 2010

 

  • Share/Bookmark

Call for Papers: Association of American Geographers (AAG) Annual Conference

8 October 2009

The Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers (AAG) will be held on April 14-18, 2010, in Washington D.C. GECHS SSC-member Joni Seager (Bentley University) is co-organising a paper session on “Gender and Climate Change – Pitfalls, Possibilities and Realities”, with Farhana Sultana (Syracuse University). Sponsors are Cultural and Political Ecology Specialty Group (CAPE), Development Geographies Specialty Group (DGSG), and Geographical Perspectives on Women Specialty Group (GPOW).

Geographers are uniquely situated to engage with the ways that nature-society relations are differentiated along gender lines, bringing fresh perspectives and critical lenses to the ways that climate change impacts and adaptation efforts are understood, experienced and acted up differently across axes of social differentiation, sites and scales. A gender perspective can thus provide insights to enrich existing debates, demonstrating the ways that drivers of climate change, vulnerability, resiliency, adaptation, policy-making, and decision-making are all bound up with various constructions of gender and difference, which have important outcomes in the ways that climate changes come to affect people and places. This session seeks to engender climate change debates and bring critical geography perspectives into conversation with the dominant narratives around climate change, related impacts, mitigation, and adaptation. Papers are invited that engage with such concerns.

Please send abstracts of no more than 250 words to both organizers by 15 October 2009. For more information on the AAG conference, please visit the conference website.  Please note that there is no funding to assist attendance to the AAG conference.

  • Share/Bookmark

Call for papers: Climate Change, Social Stress and Violent Conflict

21 August 2009

The international conference Climate Change, Social Stress and Violent Conflict, will be organized at the Klima Campus at Hamburg University, November 19-20, 2009. The workshop aims to bring together national and international experts to explore and discuss main elements of the current “state of the art” in terms of knowledge on security implications and conflict potential of climate change. Furthermore participants will explore research needs, both with respect to problem analysis and methodologies. Besides providing a snapshot of the current debate, it aims at building connections among individuals and research groups that can provide a basis for establishing an international network on climate security and conflict.

These are some of the guiding questions for the conference:

  • What are the major causal chains between climate change and violent conflict, and what is the empirical basis for these linkages, revisiting previous assessments of environmental conflict?
  • Which approaches, methods and theories are helpful for the analysis of the links between climate change, social stress and violent conflict?
  • Is it adequate to call climate change a threat to national or international security?
  • Are broader security conceptions (such as environmental or human security) useful for evaluating the violence risks of climate change?
  • What is the likelihood, potential damage and resulting risk for violent conflict of water and food scarcity, mass migrations and natural disasters induced by climate change?

Deadline for submission of abstracts is August 31, 2009. Send abstracts of maximum one page to: ClimateSecurity@uni-hamburg.de (Subject line: Abstract Climate Conflict Conference). The conference organizer is KlimaCampus, Universität Hamburg.

  • Share/Bookmark