Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
History
News
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/81/69/75/816975cf-f197-08dc-1e33-bbdd15316fd1/mza_937988304252962731.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Climate Cha(lle)nge
Università di Bologna
8 episodes
3 days ago
Climate Cha(lle)nge is a podcast by the Collegio Superiore of the University of Bologna, conceived, written, and recorded by the PhD students of the International PhD College.
This is a dissemination project designed to make the climate crisis more understandable, accessible and engaging! To this end, the podast opens up a space for discussion on the many dimensions of global changes, including social, political, economic, psychological and technological. 
The format features an informal discussion between moderators and guests from academia and other professional sectors, offering a multidisciplinary perspective on why the climate crisis is ultimately a human crisis.

Created by: Agnese Palazzi , Anastasiia Timofeeva, Anastasiia Timofeeva, Anna Sofia Lippolis, Roujing Wu, Camilla Ioli, Ettore Gorni, Irene Trombini, Koushika Sri Lakshmi Srikanth and Mathilde Luna Joly.
Show more...
News Commentary
News
RSS
All content for Climate Cha(lle)nge is the property of Università di Bologna and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Climate Cha(lle)nge is a podcast by the Collegio Superiore of the University of Bologna, conceived, written, and recorded by the PhD students of the International PhD College.
This is a dissemination project designed to make the climate crisis more understandable, accessible and engaging! To this end, the podast opens up a space for discussion on the many dimensions of global changes, including social, political, economic, psychological and technological. 
The format features an informal discussion between moderators and guests from academia and other professional sectors, offering a multidisciplinary perspective on why the climate crisis is ultimately a human crisis.

Created by: Agnese Palazzi , Anastasiia Timofeeva, Anastasiia Timofeeva, Anna Sofia Lippolis, Roujing Wu, Camilla Ioli, Ettore Gorni, Irene Trombini, Koushika Sri Lakshmi Srikanth and Mathilde Luna Joly.
Show more...
News Commentary
News
https://d3wo5wojvuv7l.cloudfront.net/t_rss_itunes_square_1400/images.spreaker.com/original/ecb3aff74bc9a6238a2d9fb16e273181.jpg
Episode 0 - Welcome to the socio-environmental crisis
Climate Cha(lle)nge
41 minutes
6 months ago
Episode 0 - Welcome to the socio-environmental crisis
Did you know that the climate crisis isn’t really about the climate? It’s a crisis caused by human societies—with uneven historical responsibilities—and one that affects people and ecosystems far more than the planet itself. In this episode, philosopher of science Telmo Pievani helps us unpack the concept of polycrisis and why tackling climate change means rethinking our entire social and economic systems.This episode will be held in Italian.
Climate Cha(lle)nge
Climate Cha(lle)nge is a podcast by the Collegio Superiore of the University of Bologna, conceived, written, and recorded by the PhD students of the International PhD College.
This is a dissemination project designed to make the climate crisis more understandable, accessible and engaging! To this end, the podast opens up a space for discussion on the many dimensions of global changes, including social, political, economic, psychological and technological. 
The format features an informal discussion between moderators and guests from academia and other professional sectors, offering a multidisciplinary perspective on why the climate crisis is ultimately a human crisis.

Created by: Agnese Palazzi , Anastasiia Timofeeva, Anastasiia Timofeeva, Anna Sofia Lippolis, Roujing Wu, Camilla Ioli, Ettore Gorni, Irene Trombini, Koushika Sri Lakshmi Srikanth and Mathilde Luna Joly.