Anthropology and Climate Change
From Transformations to Worldmaking
Herausgeber: Crate, Susan A.; Nuttall, Mark
Anthropology and Climate Change
From Transformations to Worldmaking
Herausgeber: Crate, Susan A.; Nuttall, Mark
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This third edition builds on the previous editions' pioneering focus on anthropology's burgeoning contribution to climate change by revealing the extent to which anthropologistsâ contributions are considered to be critical by climate scientists, policymakers, affected communities and other rights-holders.
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This third edition builds on the previous editions' pioneering focus on anthropology's burgeoning contribution to climate change by revealing the extent to which anthropologistsâ contributions are considered to be critical by climate scientists, policymakers, affected communities and other rights-holders.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- 3 ed
- Erscheinungstermin: Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 170mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 748g
- ISBN-13: 9781032150932
- ISBN-10: 1032150939
- Artikelnr.: 68476832
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- 3 ed
- Erscheinungstermin: Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 170mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 748g
- ISBN-13: 9781032150932
- ISBN-10: 1032150939
- Artikelnr.: 68476832
Susan A. Crate is an environmental and cognitive anthropologist and Professor Emeritus of George Mason University, USA. Mark Nuttall is Professor and Henry Marshall Tory Chair of Anthropology at the University of Alberta, Canada. He is also Adjunct Professor at Ilisimatusarfik/University of Greenland and the Greenland Climate Research Centre in Nuuk, and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.
Introduction: from transformations to worldmaking Susan A. Crate and Mark
Nuttall Part 1: Reorientations 1. The arc of the Anthropocene: deep-time
perspectives from environmental archaeology 2. Re-fielding climate change
in cultural anthropology 3. A picaresque critique: the anthropology of
disasters and displacement in the era of global warming and pandemics 4.
Understanding Arctic melt: reflections on collaborative interdisciplinary
research 5. 'Knowing' climate: engaging vernacular narratives of change
Part 2: Worldmaking Practices 6. "Don't look down:" green technologies,
climate change, and mining 7. Getting it right: What needs to be done to
ensure First Nations' participation and benefit from large-scale renewable
energy developments on Country? 8. Whither the winds of change? Worldmaking
winds and seasonal disruptions in the northern Chilean Andes 9. The water
obliges: climate change and worldmaking practices in Peru 10. Climate
actions with a lagniappe: coastal restoration, flood risk reduction, sacred
site protection, and Tribal communities' resilience 11. Climate change as
colonial echo in the Canadian Arctic 12. On new ground: tracing
human-muskox reconfigurations in Greenland 13. The disappearing free
reindeer: unexpected consequences of climate change for Fennoscandian
reindeer herding 14. Sakha and alaas: place attachment and cultural
identity in a time of climate change 15. A reflexive approach to climate
change engagement with Sherpas from Khumbu and Pharak in northeastern Nepal
(Mount Everest Region) Part 3: Interventions 16. Why we need to pay
attention to wealth and inequality in lowering carbon emissions 17.
Decarbonization and making the energy future in the Welsh underlands 18.
Representation and luck: reflections on climate and collaboration in
Shishmaref, Alaska 19. Agricultural intensification in Northern Burkina
Faso: smallholder adaptation to climate change 20. Anthropological
contributions to IPCC assessment work 21. Negotiating science and policy in
international climate assessments 22. From "lone ranger" to team player:
the role of anthropology in training a new generation of climate adaptation
professionals 23. Climate counter-hegemony: crafting an anthropological
climate politics through student-faculty collaborations in the classroom
and on the streets 24. Caiyugluku: pulling from within to meet the
challenges in a rapidly changing Arctic 25. Culture and heritage in climate
conversations: reflections on connection culture, heritage and climate
change
Nuttall Part 1: Reorientations 1. The arc of the Anthropocene: deep-time
perspectives from environmental archaeology 2. Re-fielding climate change
in cultural anthropology 3. A picaresque critique: the anthropology of
disasters and displacement in the era of global warming and pandemics 4.
Understanding Arctic melt: reflections on collaborative interdisciplinary
research 5. 'Knowing' climate: engaging vernacular narratives of change
Part 2: Worldmaking Practices 6. "Don't look down:" green technologies,
climate change, and mining 7. Getting it right: What needs to be done to
ensure First Nations' participation and benefit from large-scale renewable
energy developments on Country? 8. Whither the winds of change? Worldmaking
winds and seasonal disruptions in the northern Chilean Andes 9. The water
obliges: climate change and worldmaking practices in Peru 10. Climate
actions with a lagniappe: coastal restoration, flood risk reduction, sacred
site protection, and Tribal communities' resilience 11. Climate change as
colonial echo in the Canadian Arctic 12. On new ground: tracing
human-muskox reconfigurations in Greenland 13. The disappearing free
reindeer: unexpected consequences of climate change for Fennoscandian
reindeer herding 14. Sakha and alaas: place attachment and cultural
identity in a time of climate change 15. A reflexive approach to climate
change engagement with Sherpas from Khumbu and Pharak in northeastern Nepal
(Mount Everest Region) Part 3: Interventions 16. Why we need to pay
attention to wealth and inequality in lowering carbon emissions 17.
Decarbonization and making the energy future in the Welsh underlands 18.
Representation and luck: reflections on climate and collaboration in
Shishmaref, Alaska 19. Agricultural intensification in Northern Burkina
Faso: smallholder adaptation to climate change 20. Anthropological
contributions to IPCC assessment work 21. Negotiating science and policy in
international climate assessments 22. From "lone ranger" to team player:
the role of anthropology in training a new generation of climate adaptation
professionals 23. Climate counter-hegemony: crafting an anthropological
climate politics through student-faculty collaborations in the classroom
and on the streets 24. Caiyugluku: pulling from within to meet the
challenges in a rapidly changing Arctic 25. Culture and heritage in climate
conversations: reflections on connection culture, heritage and climate
change
Introduction: from transformations to worldmaking Susan A. Crate and Mark
Nuttall Part 1: Reorientations 1. The arc of the Anthropocene: deep-time
perspectives from environmental archaeology 2. Re-fielding climate change
in cultural anthropology 3. A picaresque critique: the anthropology of
disasters and displacement in the era of global warming and pandemics 4.
Understanding Arctic melt: reflections on collaborative interdisciplinary
research 5. 'Knowing' climate: engaging vernacular narratives of change
Part 2: Worldmaking Practices 6. "Don't look down:" green technologies,
climate change, and mining 7. Getting it right: What needs to be done to
ensure First Nations' participation and benefit from large-scale renewable
energy developments on Country? 8. Whither the winds of change? Worldmaking
winds and seasonal disruptions in the northern Chilean Andes 9. The water
obliges: climate change and worldmaking practices in Peru 10. Climate
actions with a lagniappe: coastal restoration, flood risk reduction, sacred
site protection, and Tribal communities' resilience 11. Climate change as
colonial echo in the Canadian Arctic 12. On new ground: tracing
human-muskox reconfigurations in Greenland 13. The disappearing free
reindeer: unexpected consequences of climate change for Fennoscandian
reindeer herding 14. Sakha and alaas: place attachment and cultural
identity in a time of climate change 15. A reflexive approach to climate
change engagement with Sherpas from Khumbu and Pharak in northeastern Nepal
(Mount Everest Region) Part 3: Interventions 16. Why we need to pay
attention to wealth and inequality in lowering carbon emissions 17.
Decarbonization and making the energy future in the Welsh underlands 18.
Representation and luck: reflections on climate and collaboration in
Shishmaref, Alaska 19. Agricultural intensification in Northern Burkina
Faso: smallholder adaptation to climate change 20. Anthropological
contributions to IPCC assessment work 21. Negotiating science and policy in
international climate assessments 22. From "lone ranger" to team player:
the role of anthropology in training a new generation of climate adaptation
professionals 23. Climate counter-hegemony: crafting an anthropological
climate politics through student-faculty collaborations in the classroom
and on the streets 24. Caiyugluku: pulling from within to meet the
challenges in a rapidly changing Arctic 25. Culture and heritage in climate
conversations: reflections on connection culture, heritage and climate
change
Nuttall Part 1: Reorientations 1. The arc of the Anthropocene: deep-time
perspectives from environmental archaeology 2. Re-fielding climate change
in cultural anthropology 3. A picaresque critique: the anthropology of
disasters and displacement in the era of global warming and pandemics 4.
Understanding Arctic melt: reflections on collaborative interdisciplinary
research 5. 'Knowing' climate: engaging vernacular narratives of change
Part 2: Worldmaking Practices 6. "Don't look down:" green technologies,
climate change, and mining 7. Getting it right: What needs to be done to
ensure First Nations' participation and benefit from large-scale renewable
energy developments on Country? 8. Whither the winds of change? Worldmaking
winds and seasonal disruptions in the northern Chilean Andes 9. The water
obliges: climate change and worldmaking practices in Peru 10. Climate
actions with a lagniappe: coastal restoration, flood risk reduction, sacred
site protection, and Tribal communities' resilience 11. Climate change as
colonial echo in the Canadian Arctic 12. On new ground: tracing
human-muskox reconfigurations in Greenland 13. The disappearing free
reindeer: unexpected consequences of climate change for Fennoscandian
reindeer herding 14. Sakha and alaas: place attachment and cultural
identity in a time of climate change 15. A reflexive approach to climate
change engagement with Sherpas from Khumbu and Pharak in northeastern Nepal
(Mount Everest Region) Part 3: Interventions 16. Why we need to pay
attention to wealth and inequality in lowering carbon emissions 17.
Decarbonization and making the energy future in the Welsh underlands 18.
Representation and luck: reflections on climate and collaboration in
Shishmaref, Alaska 19. Agricultural intensification in Northern Burkina
Faso: smallholder adaptation to climate change 20. Anthropological
contributions to IPCC assessment work 21. Negotiating science and policy in
international climate assessments 22. From "lone ranger" to team player:
the role of anthropology in training a new generation of climate adaptation
professionals 23. Climate counter-hegemony: crafting an anthropological
climate politics through student-faculty collaborations in the classroom
and on the streets 24. Caiyugluku: pulling from within to meet the
challenges in a rapidly changing Arctic 25. Culture and heritage in climate
conversations: reflections on connection culture, heritage and climate
change