Opening Remarks World 2050

THE WORLD IN 2050: CREATING/IMAGINING JUST CLIMATE FUTURES

A NEARLY CARBON-NEUTRAL CONFERENCE

Opening Remarks

John Foran

John Foran is Professor of Sociology and Environmental Studies at UCSB, teaching courses on climate change and climate justice, activism and movements for radical social change, and issues of alternatives to development and globalization beyond capitalism. His research and activism are now centered within the global climate justice movement.

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Scroll down for talk transcript.

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0:00Welcome everyone!
0:03I’m John Foran, co-organizer at
0:05this virtual conference here at UC Santa
0:09Barbara: “The World in 2050: Imagining and
0:12Creating Just Climate Futures,” with Ken
0:15Hiltner. And I do think of us as a
0:19community, or least a community in the
0:21making,
0:22who are involved in this wonderful
0:24experiment together. And I look forward
0:29to our interaction during the three
0:32weeks that the conference is open for
0:35comments, and beyond. Who knows what’s
0:38going to happen? I’m immensely excited
0:40about the possibilities! The virtual
0:43conference aspect is hugely important to
0:46us, and here I want to give full credit to
0:49my partner and co-organizer Ken Hiltner,
0:53who is really architect of the virtual
0:57conference in an academic setting, who
1:00conceived it and overcame many a
1:03technical issue to make it possible to
1:05do this and to open it to the world. And
1:08indeed this is the second such
1:10conference to our knowledge ever done in
1:13this way. You can think of me as the
1:17chief cheerleader of this revolutionary
1:20concept — the idea that we would actually
1:23as academics who work on issues related
1:26to climate change and environment that
1:29we would actually “walk the talk” of the
1:31realities of climate change and that we
1:34would model this and offer it freely to
1:37others. As the conference introduction
1:42says: “We believe that a conference that
1:44takes up the issue of climate change
1:46while simultaneously contributing to the
1:48problem to such a degree through airfare
1:51through aviation and airfare — because it
1:56costs a great deal of money that most
1:58people don’t have to organize such a
2:00conference — is simply unconscionable. The
2:04theme — the world in 2050: imagining and
2:07creating just climate futures — matters a
2:10lot to us.
2:11It comes from our Critical Issues
2:13America program for 2015 and
2:162016, this larger program of which
2:19this conference is the culmination. It is
2:22on the theme of “Climate Futures: This
2:25Changes Everything,” and Ken and I with
2:28many others here at UCSB — faculty,
2:31graduate students, undergraduates —
2:33undertook this about a year ago because
2:37we think there’s no more critical issue
2:39faced by the world, by humanity let alone
2:42America, than our climate future, and
2:47both Ken and I have devoted the last
2:49half decade or more to signaling this
2:52across the humanities and the social
2:54sciences and as far as possible
2:57beyond them. Again to read from the self-
3:03introduction to this conference, “The most
3:06pressing existential issue of the 21st
3:09century for humanity as a whole is the
3:12increasingly grim reality of climate
3:14change and our entry into a new era in
3:17the history of humans on the planet
3:19well signified by the term the”Anthropocene.”
3:22The changing conditions of life
3:25on Earth lie at the center of a storm of
3:28interconnected crises which include
3:31among others the precarity and the great
3:34inequality that the global economy
3:36drives, a widening deficit of political
3:40legitimacy which one need look no further
3:42than the current American election
3:45season of 2016, and cultures scarred by
3:49violence, from the most intimate
3:51interpersonal interactions to the most
3:54global realities of war-making.” But we go on
3:58to say:
3:59″Unlike either the justifiablly
4:00pessimistic critical discussions or the
4:04unrealistically optimistic policy
4:06approaches that increasingly confront, or
4:09indeed ignore each other around the
4:11climate crisis, this conference will
4:14depart from our present ground zero by
4:17asking participants to experiment with
4:20perspectives on the multiple possible
4:22states of the world in mid-century, and
4:25to work back
4:26toward the present in an attempt to
4:29imagine, envision, ultimately enable and
4:34to collaboratively find or create some
4:36of the pathways to a more just — or just
4:40less worse — outcome for humanity by 2050.
4:45So what’s going to happen at this
4:47conference?
4:48Actually I don’t know, so much is up to
4:51you, to all of us, and to many others. You
4:54– the audience traditionally speaking — are
4:57more than that: you’re direct participants
5:00in the conversations that we hope these
5:02talks will start. So please involve
5:06yourself with all the passion and
5:08imagination and creativity and loving
5:11activism that you can bring to this,
5:13making it fun as well as serious. There
5:18are some 50 talks, organized into 17 panels,
5:22covering such topics as oceans, cli-fi
5:26(climate fiction), cities, agriculture and
5:30food, technology, climate action, climate
5:34justice, and many others, often
5:37intersecting since “this changes
5:39everything” means that everything affects
5:42everything else, and part of the
5:44challenge is to figure out how, and to use
5:47that knowledge strategically to change
5:49ways,to change things in ways that
5:52ripple outward, long and slow or sudden
5:56and “flashingly” (to create a new word).
5:59There is far from enough diversity, and
6:03no doubt that is our faul, in this
6:06conference and the early stages of doing
6:08this kind of conference in ways that
6:10permit full activation of its deeply
6:13democratic potential. And I feel this. We
6:17do, someone pointed out, have speakers
6:20from six continents and with any luck
6:24we’ll have participants from all seven,
6:26if not also from the nonhuman world
6:29which is our partner in this adventure
6:30(we do have sponsorships from all major
6:33plant and animal groups by the way). We
6:38have some great keynote speakers, and I
6:39want to thank
6:40each of them — Bill McKibben… I’m not going
6:44to try to introduce each of these people —
6:46they’re all extremely significant to me
6:49and I hope you’ll enjoy what they have
6:52to say: Bill McKibben, Margaret Klein
6:56Salamon, Eric Assadurian, Patrick Bond, Wen
7:01Stephenson — all of them have had a major
7:03impact on me as a scholar, as an activist,
7:06as a thinking and feeling
7:09person. We also have two featured panels:
7:13one that Ken is putting together on this
7:17very topic of the movement toward
7:20getting academics to fly less [note: find this at the EHI website] and one
7:24that I’ve put together on the idea that
7:26we need something akin to a wartime
7:29mobilization effort at this point in the
7:32climate crisis. So let the discussion
7:35begin and may it unfold far and wide and
7:39deeply. We look forward to hearing from
7:42you and I feel immense gratitude that
7:45you’ve joined us so that we may inspire
7:47and learn from each other and ultimately
7:50act together to imagine and create the
7:54world we want.
7:56Thank you again.

Ken Hiltner

Ken Hiltner is a Professor of the environmental humanities at UCSB. The Director of the Environmental Humanities Initiative (EHI), Hiltner has appointments in English and Environmental Studies.  He has served as Director of UCSB’s Literature & Environment Center and as the Barron Visiting Professor in the Environment and Humanities at Princeton University.

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0:00 Hi everyone. This is Ken Hiltner. First,
0:03 welcome to our conference. I hope
0:05 that you enjoy it and that you
0:07 watch as many of the talks as you can and
0:09 you take part in the Q&A sessions, which
0:12 we hope will be very exciting. I wanted
0:15 to take just a minute or two
0:17 to talk about why we’ve
0:19 undertaken a conference like this. The first
0:22 reason is environmental.
0:24 Recently UC Santa Barbara did an
0:26 assessment of the carbon footprint for
0:28 the entire campus. We looked at buildings,
0:31 gas and electricity. We looked at the labs.
0:35 We looked at the vehicle fleet. We tried to
0:37 take everything into account. The
0:40 results really surprised me because
0:44 roughly a third of the carbon footprint
0:46 for the campus came just from air travel
0:49 to conferences, talks, meetings and the like.
0:53 To put that in another frame, that’s 55
0:58 million pounds of carbon dioxide or
1:01 equivalent gases expended every year by
1:04 this one campus. Put that in human terms,
1:08 that’s the equivalent of a city of
1:12 27,500 people for an entire year for all
1:17 aspects of their lives in India. That’s
1:19 an astonishing amount of CO2. So
1:24 obviously, one of the reasons that we
1:27 wanted to do a conference like this is to
1:29 cut down on that. This is our second such
1:31 conference. When we did the math for the
1:34 first one, we discovered that its
1:37 carbon footprint was smaller than 1% of
1:40 a traditional conference. But
1:44 there are other reasons, cultural reasons,
1:46 and important ones. Most people on the
1:49 planet will never get in an airplane. In fact,
1:52 only one and twenty people on the planet
1:55 have ever been in an airplane.
1:58 This simple fact summarily excludes
2:02 scholars from all over the developing
2:04 world from taking part in conferences. What I mean by this
2:07 is that the airfare from pretty much
2:09 anywhere in the development world to
2:11 pretty much anywhere in North America,
2:13 for example, often will exceed the
2:16 per-capita income of those countries –
2:17 meaning that scholars have incredibly
2:20 difficult time coming to conferences.
2:23 We’re very pleased that this conference
2:26 has scholars from all six continents
2:29 (though non from Antarctica) and that we have quite a few of them.
2:33 We are also proud of the fact
2:36 that we worked hard to make sure that
2:38 this conference can be viewed all over
2:40 the world, even in places like China,
2:42 where they ban YouTube, which is our
2:45 streaming service. We have kind of worked a
2:47 little work-around that allow folks
2:49 there by way of our website to watch
2:52 the talks. So, I think that’s really important
2:55 open up conferences, which have
2:58 largely been closed-door affairs for a
3:00 long time – and not just to folks in
3:04 different parts of the world, but also for
3:05 different sorts of
3:08 individuals with different
3:10 capabilities and accessibility issues.
3:14 What I mean by that is that in this
3:17 conference anyone can watch it from
3:19 anywhere. You do not have to
3:21 worry about physical accessibility
3:23 hurdles, such as going through an airport.
3:26 We are very pleased for the first time
3:27 that we’ve made the conference entirely
3:31 closed captioned, and all of the talks are
3:34 closed captioned. Most of them have
3:35 been carefully
3:37 closed captioned been by being edited by
3:39 the speaker’s themselves to make sure
3:41 that they are accurate, which I think is just
3:43 wonderful for individuals who are
3:44 deaf or hard-of-hearing. So, a
3:47 conference like this also has the
3:49 ability to be far more inclusive for a
3:52 range of individuals. It is also the
3:55 case that – and this is related to accessibility – that it
3:58 creates an archive
4:00 and the fact that it is entirely open
4:03 means that anyone anywhere can watch
4:06 this talk – that’s something that
4:07 hasn’t really been possible before. So,
4:10 in the case of really terrific conferences,
4:12 where groundbreaking work is
4:15 done, very few people get to
4:17 attend those. And since there is no
4:19 archive often left from them,
4:21 they are very privileged bunch. In this
4:25 case, however, anyone can do this.
4:27 In fact, we’ve opened this
4:29 conference up so that anyone anywhere
4:31 can participate in the Q&A sessions
4:33 as well. We think that’s very important.
4:37 It is also the case that we are
4:41 advocating for this type of conference.
4:43 In fact, we created the White Paper that
4:45 explains how how we did it in case
4:47 people would like to up to follow our
4:49 example – although we would very happy
4:52 if people diverged for our example
4:55 and did something entirely different,
4:57 insofar as they would be thinking
4:59 about how to do a conference
5:01 without air travel – that’s that’s just
5:03 great. But it is the case that
5:06 an institution anywhere in the world now
5:08 has the ability to stage a conference like
5:11 this. Traditionally doing an
5:13 international conference, between
5:15 the honorarium for a keynote
5:17 speaker, or multiple keynote speakers, the travel
5:20 involved, venue, food for dinners,
5:23 and all can be an incredibly expensive
5:25 proposition that institutions
5:27 in the developing world wouldn’t
5:28 necessarily have the ability to do – or
5:31 institutions all over the place.
5:33 We hope that this format allows people
5:35 everywhere to be able to stage
5:37 conferences and not just
5:39 institutions of higher learning, but also groups
5:41 of all sorts. So our hope is that this
5:46 effort to rethink the traditional
5:48 conference for the 21st century will
5:51 have a sufficient number of
5:54 advantages that it will be appealing for
5:56 other folks to experiment with it. But
5:59 you have the opportunity to assess just
6:01 how well something like this works.
6:04 Last time we were very happy that our
6:06 Q&A sessions were very active. In fact,
6:09 one of them had a
6:10 little over 10 times more activity than
6:13 you would traditionally get at a
6:15 face-to-face Q&A session. We’ll see what
6:19 happens this time. I actually have high
6:21 hopes that this is going to be a very
6:22 active conference. It will be open for three
6:25 weeks. We hope that you keep coming back. It
6:28 can, of course, be viewed on any sort of
6:30 device – and it is noteworthy that it can be
6:32 produced on any sort of device. What
6:34 I mean by this is that speakers do
6:37 not have to have very expensive
6:38 equipment. In fact, really all you needed
6:40 was a smartphone. In fact, some people did
6:42 do their talks using just a smartphone.
6:45 So, I will not take your time further. There
6:49 are some really interesting talks that I
6:51 think you would
6:53 rather be watching than listening
6:54 to me. But do give it a chance and see
6:58 how you like this format and and let us
7:00 know and think about, if you’re really
7:04 intrigued by the concept, of maybe doing
7:07 a conference like this or your own.
7:08 Okay, thank you very much and take care.

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Note that this panel has an unusual feature: to the right of the videos, below the speaker bios, are unabridged transcripts for both of the talks (scroll down to view them). These transcripts are timestamped so that they can suggest points of interest in the videos. Because they are derived from the closed captioning, they are faithful to the actual talk given, rather than notes that may have been used by the speaker. Transcripts have obvious advantages, as they can be quickly scanned to provide an overview of the talk. Moreover, as video files are huge by comparison (they can be more than ten thousand times larger than a talk transcript), reading rather than watching the talk may be a welcome option if a fast Internet connection is not available. Reading the transcript also obviously uses far less energy than viewing the talk video and consequently is responsible for fewer greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. If this feature proves popular, we will work to implement it for all talks in future NCN conferences.

Q & A

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Before posting, you must first register. Note that questions and comments can be intended for individual speakers, the entire panel, or anyone who has posted to the Q&A. Respond directly to a particular question/comment by way of the little “reply” below it. The vertical threadlike lines are there to make it easier to see which part of the discussion (i.e. “thread”) you are taking up. You can choose to be notified via email (see below) whenever a question, answer, or comment is posted to this particular Q&A. Because the email notification will contain the new comment in its entirety, you can both follow the discussion as it is unfolding, as well as decide whether you would like to step in at any point. You can choose to receive email notifications for as many of the conference Q&A sessions as you like, as well as stop notifications at any time. Because the Q&A sessions will close at the end of the conference, all email notifications will also end at this time. Although only registered conference participants can pose questions and make comments, Q&A sessions are visible to the public and will remain so after the conference has ended, as we hope that they will become cited resources.

Panel 16: Everyday Life

THE WORLD IN 2050: CREATING/IMAGINING JUST CLIMATE FUTURES

A NEARLY CARBON-NEUTRAL CONFERENCE

Panel 16: Everyday Life

Digital Materiality: Petrocentrism and Public Advocacy Rhetorics

Madison Jones, University of Florida

This presentation examines the use of ghost bicycles, a derelict bike repurposed as a marker, designating a place where a cyclist has been injured in a collision with a motorist. This project augments electronic monuments, creating lasting memorials in the space the physical objects may no longer occupy. These haunting digital and material monuments speak to motorists who might not otherwise share a discourse space with cyclists, advocating for a future where non-motorists are no longer seen as obstructions for cars, nor as “alternative” transportation (more).

Scaling Quelccaya

Meredith Leich and Andrew Malone, School of the Art Institute of Chicago and Lawrence University

This talk proposes a novel system for presenting climate change data, designed to evoke a more visceral response through a visual, geospatial, poetic approach of depicting melting ice-caps. Mirroring the collapse of space brought about by cellular technology and social media, this virtual approach seeks a more imaginative, psychologically-astute manner of portraying the sober facts of climate change, by inviting viewers to learn and consider without inducing fear (more).

Q & A

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Before posting, you must first register. Note that questions and comments can be intended for individual speakers, the entire panel, or anyone who has posted to the Q&A. Respond directly to a particular question/comment by way of the little “reply” below it. The vertical threadlike lines are there to make it easier to see which part of the discussion (i.e. “thread”) you are taking up. You can choose to be notified via email (see below) whenever a question, answer, or comment is posted to this particular Q&A. Because the email notification will contain the new comment in its entirety, you can both follow the discussion as it is unfolding, as well as decide whether you would like to step in at any point. You can choose to receive email notifications for as many of the conference Q&A sessions as you like, as well as stop notifications at any time. Because the Q&A sessions will close at the end of the conference, all email notifications will also end at this time. Although only registered conference participants can pose questions and make comments, Q&A sessions are visible to the public and will remain so after the conference has ended, as we hope that they will become cited resources.

Panel 10: Rising Seas, Refugees, Cities

THE WORLD IN 2050: CREATING/IMAGINING JUST CLIMATE FUTURES

A NEARLY CARBON-NEUTRAL CONFERENCE

Panel 10: Rising Seas, Refugees, Cities

Delineating Climate Change Planning in Urban Governance: An Analysis of Where and How Vulnerabilities Get Addressed

Alison Kenner and Kerri Yandrich, Drexel University & State of Delaware’s Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control

This talk assesses how climate change planning (CCP) attends to existing political capabilities and public health vulnerabilities. The authors will discuss a framework, based on existing climate justice and “health in all policies” scholarship, that can be used to steer and assess CCP at the city-level (more).

Rising Sea Levels and Low Lying Islands in 2050

Christina Gerhardt, University of Hawai’i, Mānoa

This talk presents what the situation of low-lying island states is projected to be by 2050. It will outline the key issues related to rising sea levels, which include not only flooding of housing but also the salination of limited drinking water and of agricultural lands making life on remote islands increasingly unsustainable, and the solutions being put forward to them by Pacific Islanders (more).

Not to be Written, but absorbed; Oceanic Futures in 2050

Melody Jue, University of California, Santa Barbara

Moving beyond the medial paradigm of writing, this talk proposes a new way to tell the narrative of the state of oceans in 2050. It will incorporate the speaker’s own underwater footage of local kelp forests and the coastal environment in this talk, in order to persuasively show how the ocean changes the medial paradigm from writing to ‘absorption’ through which we imagine and talk about the future in 2050 (more).

Modeling Environmental Benefits on Health in a More Urbanized World

Rick Thomas, Bren School of Environmental Science & Management

This talk explores the role urban greenspace can play in improving health. It explains the necessity of a way to model the benefits these spaces can provide in order to make informed decisions on the best type, quantity, and distribution parks in cities. This presentation will walk through why such a model is necessary, what it would look like and what it would accomplish (more).

Q & A

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Before posting, you must first register. Note that questions and comments can be intended for individual speakers, the entire panel, or anyone who has posted to the Q&A. Respond directly to a particular question/comment by way of the little “reply” below it. The vertical threadlike lines are there to make it easier to see which part of the discussion (i.e. “thread”) you are taking up. You can choose to be notified via email (see below) whenever a question, answer, or comment is posted to this particular Q&A. Because the email notification will contain the new comment in its entirety, you can both follow the discussion as it is unfolding, as well as decide whether you would like to step in at any point. You can choose to receive email notifications for as many of the conference Q&A sessions as you like, as well as stop notifications at any time. Because the Q&A sessions will close at the end of the conference, all email notifications will also end at this time. Although only registered conference participants can pose questions and make comments, Q&A sessions are visible to the public and will remain so after the conference has ended, as we hope that they will become cited resources.

Panel 15: Working Futures, Reducing Emissions

THE WORLD IN 2050: CREATING/IMAGINING JUST CLIMATE FUTURES

A NEARLY CARBON-NEUTRAL CONFERENCE

Panel 15: Working Futures, Reducing Emissions

Greening the Blue: Environmental Activists and Climate Action within the American Labor Movement

Todd Vachon, University of Connecticut

As part of an ongoing ethnographic research project, this talk discusses the role of environmental activists within the labor movement pressing for change from within. It will explore the role of activist pressure within the labor movement—with a focus on “just transition” policies and a “Green New Deal”—as a necessary step to eroding one of the many “pillars of support” for the fossil fuel industry in the U.S (more).

Achieving Carbon Neutrality by 2025, The UC Santa Barbara Approach

Colleen McCamy, University of California, Santa Barbara

In November 2013, University of California President Janet Napolitano challenged the UC system to achieve carbon neutrality by 2025 in scope 1 and 2 emissions in efforts to curb greater environmental degradation. This talk will describe the draft climate action plan for UCSB and the changes that will need to occur in order for us to achieve the goals in the plan (more).

Q & A

Have questions or comments? Feel free to take part in the Q&A!

Before posting, you must first register. Note that questions and comments can be intended for individual speakers, the entire panel, or anyone who has posted to the Q&A. Respond directly to a particular question/comment by way of the little “reply” below it. The vertical threadlike lines are there to make it easier to see which part of the discussion (i.e. “thread”) you are taking up. You can choose to be notified via email (see below) whenever a question, answer, or comment is posted to this particular Q&A. Because the email notification will contain the new comment in its entirety, you can both follow the discussion as it is unfolding, as well as decide whether you would like to step in at any point. You can choose to receive email notifications for as many of the conference Q&A sessions as you like, as well as stop notifications at any time. Because the Q&A sessions will close at the end of the conference, all email notifications will also end at this time. Although only registered conference participants can pose questions and make comments, Q&A sessions are visible to the public and will remain so after the conference has ended, as we hope that they will become cited resources.

Panel 14: A Role for Literature?

THE WORLD IN 2050: CREATING/IMAGINING JUST CLIMATE FUTURES

A NEARLY CARBON-NEUTRAL CONFERENCE

Panel 14: A Role for Literature?

“Fictions of Futurity”: Ecocritical Practice in Contemporary Fiction

Jessica Holmes, University of Washington

This presentation will examine narrative representations of nature and human nature in several contemporary texts. In doing so, the presenter will pose and answer a number of pertinent questions. What does it mean to represent the world as story? How can these texts serve to “imagine” and/or “create just climate futures”? And what role does literary form play in constructing practical critical approaches to global realities? Finally, how can/does fiction seek to preserve an endangered planet, and perhaps even reverse some of the damage already done? (more).

Simulating Futures: An Inquiry into the Efficacy of Cli-fi as the Literary Genre of the Anthropocene

Pooja Agarwal, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur

There is an urgent need to educate the lay citizen about the impending future that awaits us if we continue to indulge in erratic and excessive materialism and consumption. Climate-fiction offers a creative simulation of imagined futures, often dystopian, apocalyptic, and catastrophic in nature that can shake the reader out of complacency, and mobilize her/him into definite action and bring about a change at the very level of an individual. This presentation is an attempt to systematically analyze the efficacy of cli-fi as the imaginative literature of the twenty first century (more).

The Role of Environmental Literature in Mitigating Climate Change

Teja Dusanapudi

In order to change our as­of­now inevitable environmental outcome in 2050, this talk urges that we must create widespread changes to not only the laws that allow for exploitation but also to the increasingly information saturated public. The only feasible way, the presentation stresses to awake the general public to our environmental plight so that change can be made before 2050 is through literature (more).

Q & A

Have questions or comments? Feel free to take part in the Q&A!

Before posting, you must first register. Note that questions and comments can be intended for individual speakers, the entire panel, or anyone who has posted to the Q&A. Respond directly to a particular question/comment by way of the little “reply” below it. The vertical threadlike lines are there to make it easier to see which part of the discussion (i.e. “thread”) you are taking up. You can choose to be notified via email (see below) whenever a question, answer, or comment is posted to this particular Q&A. Because the email notification will contain the new comment in its entirety, you can both follow the discussion as it is unfolding, as well as decide whether you would like to step in at any point. You can choose to receive email notifications for as many of the conference Q&A sessions as you like, as well as stop notifications at any time. Because the Q&A sessions will close at the end of the conference, all email notifications will also end at this time. Although only registered conference participants can pose questions and make comments, Q&A sessions are visible to the public and will remain so after the conference has ended, as we hope that they will become cited resources.

Panel 13: Who Will Teach the Teachers?

THE WORLD IN 2050: CREATING/IMAGINING JUST CLIMATE FUTURES

A NEARLY CARBON-NEUTRAL CONFERENCE

Panel 13: Who Will Teach the Teachers?

Education in 2050 – Taking Back Our Schools

Sandra Lindberg, System Change Not Climate Change

This presentation traces a possible future of education in the year 2050. Expanding beyond merely the classroom, this talk suggests that this future also has the potential to rethink capitalism and reintegrate humans with planet (more).

A Creative World Needs Child Centric Communities

Hasmukh Sapnawala, Experience Based Holistic Learning Environment

By 2050, this presentation envisions we have moved towards self-sustaining communities where the focus of life is promoting happiness, health and harmony for everyone, specifically children. The presenter will walk us through the steps needed to get to such a world given where we are now (more).

Storefronts for Good: Local Action through Coursework

Susan Dieterlen, Syracuse University

Local, repeatable actions can sidestep government dysfunction and financial limits, while strengthening city-wide community. Neighborhood storefronts are an everyday nexus of sustainability and justice, fighting food deserts, unemployment and vacancy while improving walkability. This talk will explore this topic as a way to combat climate change while improving socio-economic conditions in more depth (more).

Q & A

Have questions or comments? Feel free to take part in the Q&A!

Before posting, you must first register. Note that questions and comments can be intended for individual speakers, the entire panel, or anyone who has posted to the Q&A. Respond directly to a particular question/comment by way of the little “reply” below it. The vertical threadlike lines are there to make it easier to see which part of the discussion (i.e. “thread”) you are taking up. You can choose to be notified via email (see below) whenever a question, answer, or comment is posted to this particular Q&A. Because the email notification will contain the new comment in its entirety, you can both follow the discussion as it is unfolding, as well as decide whether you would like to step in at any point. You can choose to receive email notifications for as many of the conference Q&A sessions as you like, as well as stop notifications at any time. Because the Q&A sessions will close at the end of the conference, all email notifications will also end at this time. Although only registered conference participants can pose questions and make comments, Q&A sessions are visible to the public and will remain so after the conference has ended, as we hope that they will become cited resources.

Panel 12: Indigenous Futures/Justice

THE WORLD IN 2050: CREATING/IMAGINING JUST CLIMATE FUTURES

A NEARLY CARBON-NEUTRAL CONFERENCE

Panel 12: Indigenous Futures/Justice

Bringing Indigenous Values to Bear on an Urban Land Ethic

Phil Arnold and Rachel May, Syracuse University

Using the Onondaga Nation’s efforts in Syracuse to revive the natural landscape, this presentation will explore some of the efforts that have been made to surmount that divide between growth and change over permanence. The authors will do so in the context of a broader theorizing about the need for an urban land ethic.(more).

Linda Hogan’s Dwellings: Our Only Future is to “Restore and Honor” the Treaties “We Once had with the Land”

Márgara Averbach, University of Buenos Aires

This talk analyzes a work by a Native author, Linda Hogan, and her approach to contextualize the relationship we have with the world around us. The presenter will explore the thought process that led us to stray “from the treaties we once had with the land”, and what it takes to honor them once again if we are to have a future as a species (more).

Solutions to a changing climate: stories from the past and present to inform the future

Julie Maldonado, Livelihoods Knowledge Exchange Network

Stories serve as powerful conduits of knowledge among and between people and across generations and locales. Considering the power of stories at this critical time, as we enter into a new climate system, this talk addresses the following question: How can storytelling – and the lessons informed by stories – foster the creation of sustainable and culturally-appropriate solutions to climate change among and between people with various technical and traditional perspectives, approaches, and objectives? (more).

Q & A

Have questions or comments? Feel free to take part in the Q&A!

Before posting, you must first register. Note that questions and comments can be intended for individual speakers, the entire panel, or anyone who has posted to the Q&A. Respond directly to a particular question/comment by way of the little “reply” below it. The vertical threadlike lines are there to make it easier to see which part of the discussion (i.e. “thread”) you are taking up. You can choose to be notified via email (see below) whenever a question, answer, or comment is posted to this particular Q&A. Because the email notification will contain the new comment in its entirety, you can both follow the discussion as it is unfolding, as well as decide whether you would like to step in at any point. You can choose to receive email notifications for as many of the conference Q&A sessions as you like, as well as stop notifications at any time. Because the Q&A sessions will close at the end of the conference, all email notifications will also end at this time. Although only registered conference participants can pose questions and make comments, Q&A sessions are visible to the public and will remain so after the conference has ended, as we hope that they will become cited resources.

Panel 11: Paths to Liberation

THE WORLD IN 2050: CREATING/IMAGINING JUST CLIMATE FUTURES

A NEARLY CARBON-NEUTRAL CONFERENCE

Panel 11: Paths to Liberation

Citizens Building Political Will

Emily Northrop, Southwestern University

This presentation will briefly describe the history, structure, values, methods and successes of the Citizens Climate Lobby, an organization of ordinary citizens who are building “political will for a livable world”. It will then sketch the economics of the “carbon fee and dividend” policy, including the projected downward redistribute of purchasing power in the United States (more).

Climate Justice: A Call for Leadership

Margot Hurlbert, University of Regina

This talks provides both a common definition of climate justice through literature review and use of a survey and argues that strong leadership from all is required to move climate justice forward. Defining justice is important as it can provide guidance to climate negotiators (more).

Liberation Communications: How Participatory Framing Fomented the People-Powered Movement for Just Transition

Celia Alario, University of California, Santa Barbara

This presenter imagines a world of 2050 that promotes rights-based approach to climate solutions. The talk outlines the path to get here, including how we can build power in communities most directly impacted by climate chaos, retool our activism and finally learned to put relationship before task, recognizing that quality relationships supported true empowerment and authentic self-expression, which allowed for greater participation, and ultimately fomented our deepening democracy (more).

Making Cosmopolitical Commons in the Ruins of Europe

Miriam Tola, Northeastern University

This talk imagines what Europe will look like 2050 by envisioning the proliferation of struggles for the commons as more just mode for dwelling on earth. Working back from the future to the present, the presentation finds traces of the cosmopolitical commons in an episode of struggle occurring in Rome, Italy, where an urban lake has recently become a central actor in a prolonged mobilization for the commons (more).

Q & A

Have questions or comments? Feel free to take part in the Q&A!

Before posting, you must first register. Note that questions and comments can be intended for individual speakers, the entire panel, or anyone who has posted to the Q&A. Respond directly to a particular question/comment by way of the little “reply” below it. The vertical threadlike lines are there to make it easier to see which part of the discussion (i.e. “thread”) you are taking up. You can choose to be notified via email (see below) whenever a question, answer, or comment is posted to this particular Q&A. Because the email notification will contain the new comment in its entirety, you can both follow the discussion as it is unfolding, as well as decide whether you would like to step in at any point. You can choose to receive email notifications for as many of the conference Q&A sessions as you like, as well as stop notifications at any time. Because the Q&A sessions will close at the end of the conference, all email notifications will also end at this time. Although only registered conference participants can pose questions and make comments, Q&A sessions are visible to the public and will remain so after the conference has ended, as we hope that they will become cited resources.

Panel 9: Future Polities/Economies

THE WORLD IN 2050: CREATING/IMAGINING JUST CLIMATE FUTURES

A NEARLY CARBON-NEUTRAL CONFERENCE

Panel 9: Future Polities/Economies

A View from the Future: Climate, Capitalism, Existentialism

Brad Hornick, Simon Frasier University

Envisioning radical changes forced upon us by climatic tipping points in coming years, this talk introduces the concept of a massive ecosocialist revolution. The presenter will discuss what such a transition would entail, and what it means for both humanity and the planet (more).

Ecoswaraj or Radical Ecological Democracy: Transformative Pathways in 2050

Ashish Kothari, Kalpavriksh & ICCA Consortium

This talk explores transformative frameworks for a sustainable and equitable future, going beyond symptomatic solutions such as ‘green growth’. It explores one such framework–Radical Ecological Democracy,–and the principals that can be derived from it moving forward to the year 2050 (more).

The Power Equation and Climate Justice in 2050

Pallav Das, Kalpavriksh

This talk makes an inquiry of the evolution of power relations as capitalism progressed through its mercantile, industrial and finance incarnations, both, through colonial and post-colonial periods, and where it stands today. It then examines the path of alternative economic development situated in the egalitarian dissemination of power, being crafted by popular movements, indigenous peoples, and initiatives of systemic change, which could lead us to a new era of climate justice in 2050 (more).

The End of Private Property

Michael Gasser, System Change not Climate Change & Michelle Glowa, California Institute for Integral Studies

This talk illustrates the dangers our current system of private property hold for the planet. The presenter will examine contemporary efforts to alter how we view the ‘right’ to property, and what it would take to abolish private property altogether (more).

Q & A

Have questions or comments? Feel free to take part in the Q&A!

Before posting, you must first register. Note that questions and comments can be intended for individual speakers, the entire panel, or anyone who has posted to the Q&A. Respond directly to a particular question/comment by way of the little “reply” below it. The vertical threadlike lines are there to make it easier to see which part of the discussion (i.e. “thread”) you are taking up. You can choose to be notified via email (see below) whenever a question, answer, or comment is posted to this particular Q&A. Because the email notification will contain the new comment in its entirety, you can both follow the discussion as it is unfolding, as well as decide whether you would like to step in at any point. You can choose to receive email notifications for as many of the conference Q&A sessions as you like, as well as stop notifications at any time. Because the Q&A sessions will close at the end of the conference, all email notifications will also end at this time. Although only registered conference participants can pose questions and make comments, Q&A sessions are visible to the public and will remain so after the conference has ended, as we hope that they will become cited resources.

Panel 8: (De)Meating the Future

THE WORLD IN 2050: CREATING/IMAGINING JUST CLIMATE FUTURES

A NEARLY CARBON-NEUTRAL CONFERENCE

Panel 8: (De)Meating the Future

Carnism and Climate

Jerome Bump, University of Texas, Austin

This presentation will explore how, by significantly reducing our meat consumption we will be able to distribute resources more justly and reduce extreme climate changes by the year 2050. This greater distribution of justice, it will be discussed, extends far beyond just humans or livestock, but all species (more).

Greenhorn Visions and the New Agrarian Activism: Imagining Alternative Agriculture in the Anthropocene

Bradley Jones, Washington University in St. Louis

This talk considers the possibilities and limits of food activism to imagine and enact just futures in the Anthropocene. To bring about more just futures the presenter will explore the emergence of alternative agriculture as a fertile site of becoming; cultivating not only new relationships between humans and nature but also between humans and other humans (more).

The Vegan Metamorphosis from 2050

Sailesh Rao, Climate Healers

This presentation predicts the possibility and attributes of a vegan metamorphosis in the years leading up to 2050. Forced into a new awareness from its unsustainable lifestyle, the presenter offers an explanation for humanity’s shift towards regarding all life as sacred, and the consequences this poses for planet (more).

Q & A

Have questions or comments? Feel free to take part in the Q&A!

Before posting, you must first register. Note that questions and comments can be intended for individual speakers, the entire panel, or anyone who has posted to the Q&A. Respond directly to a particular question/comment by way of the little “reply” below it. The vertical threadlike lines are there to make it easier to see which part of the discussion (i.e. “thread”) you are taking up. You can choose to be notified via email (see below) whenever a question, answer, or comment is posted to this particular Q&A. Because the email notification will contain the new comment in its entirety, you can both follow the discussion as it is unfolding, as well as decide whether you would like to step in at any point. You can choose to receive email notifications for as many of the conference Q&A sessions as you like, as well as stop notifications at any time. Because the Q&A sessions will close at the end of the conference, all email notifications will also end at this time. Although only registered conference participants can pose questions and make comments, Q&A sessions are visible to the public and will remain so after the conference has ended, as we hope that they will become cited resources.