Historians for Future (H4F) support the climate movement by providing a historical perspective on the climate and biodiversity crisis we are facing. Climate change is not only a scientific issue. It’s a human problem, bound up in questions of social justice and human values, and we believe that the humanities can help to solve it. This is the podcast arm of an ongoing commitment to open up conversations and resources for a wider audience. The climate change visualisations we use for this podcast were made by Emanuele Bevacqua.
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Historians for Future (H4F) support the climate movement by providing a historical perspective on the climate and biodiversity crisis we are facing. Climate change is not only a scientific issue. It’s a human problem, bound up in questions of social justice and human values, and we believe that the humanities can help to solve it. This is the podcast arm of an ongoing commitment to open up conversations and resources for a wider audience. The climate change visualisations we use for this podcast were made by Emanuele Bevacqua.
H4F talk with Dania Achermann: Ice Cores, Small States and Global Climate Change (S01E04)
Historians For Future
18 minutes 42 seconds
3 years ago
H4F talk with Dania Achermann: Ice Cores, Small States and Global Climate Change (S01E04)
For our final talk of the series H4F chat with Dania Achermann the topic “Histories of Climate Science". We talk about Dania’s research on ice-core paleoclimatology and the cultural-political factors that shape how we know and understand climate sciences.
Historians For Future
Historians for Future (H4F) support the climate movement by providing a historical perspective on the climate and biodiversity crisis we are facing. Climate change is not only a scientific issue. It’s a human problem, bound up in questions of social justice and human values, and we believe that the humanities can help to solve it. This is the podcast arm of an ongoing commitment to open up conversations and resources for a wider audience. The climate change visualisations we use for this podcast were made by Emanuele Bevacqua.