Climate Change: One, or Many?

Climate Change: One, or Many?

Categories: Lectures and Seminars | Intended for

Friday, November 14, 2014

2:30 PM - 4:00 PM | Add to calendar

208 Tory Building

1125 Colonel By Dr, Ottawa, ON

Contact Information

Natalia Fierro Marquez, 613-520-2600 x 2560, Natalia.FierroMarquez@carleton.ca

Registration

No registration required.

Cost

Free

About this Event

Host Organization: Department of Geography and Environmental Studies Founders Seminar Series

Mike Hulme , Professor of Climate and Culture from the Department of Geography, King’s College London will be presenting a founders Seminar lecture titled: Climate Change: One, or Many?

Abstract: The story of climate change has become too univocal. There is an orthodoxy – even a hegemony – which does not do justice to the complexities of what is happening to climates around the world, nor how such changes are understood. It is an orthodoxy which is not just inadequate, but also dangerous. A cultural analysis of climate and its changes is needed, to think through the different ways in which policies and other interventions to deal with climatic dangers might be designed and enacted.

Biography: Mike Hulme is Professor of Climate and Culture at King’s College, London. His work explores the idea of climate change using historical, cultural, and scientific analyses, seeking to illuminate the numerous ways in which climate change is deployed in public and private discourse. His book Why We Disagree About Climate Change (Cambridge, 2009) was chosen by The Economist as one of its books of the year.