Rachel Carson Fellowship

(7 November 2013)  I have been awarded a Carson Writing Fellowship for 2014 at the Rachel Carson Centre for Environment and Society at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich.  This is a personal award and will allow me to spend 5 months from April-September 2014 as a Fellow of the Center.  The Rachel Carson Center is part of […]

‘Can the climate system be managed by humans?’

(1 November)  My public lecture at the Centre for International Governance Innovation in Waterloo on Thursday 24 October 2013, ‘The public life of climate change; the first 25 years’, has been blogged about here by Erin Baxter of CIGI … “Whether climate can be managed by humans is the question that set the scene for […]

What do citizens and scientists expect of each other?

(1 November 2013)  Read my new blog post ‘What do citizens and scientists expect of each other?’  Over the last couple of weeks I have found myself in three very different settings in which challenging questions have been asked about the relationship between scientific knowledge and personal belief and social behaviour.  Each time this has […]

The future of nature: documents of global change

(31 October)  This new book from Yale University Press – ‘The future of nature: documents of global change’ – is newly published.  It contains a commentary by me on John Tyndall’s original 1859 experiments into the greenhouse effect and also includes an abridged version of my 2011 Osiris article ‘Reducing the future to climate’, which […]

About Me: Making climate change work for us.

Books Published

Hulme,M. (2013)  Exploring climate change through science and in society: an anthology of Mike Hulme’s essays, interviews and speeches  Routledge, Abingdon, 353pp. Hulme,M. and Neufeldt,H. (eds.) (2010)   Making climate change work for us: European perspectives on adaptation and mitigation...

Knowledge, authority and the construction of climate change

(22 August 2013)  I am an international collaborator on this project, Cultures of Prediction, led by Professor Matthias Heymann at the University of Aarhus, Denmark.  It is funded by the Danish Research Council and examines the emergence of climate modeling as a culture of prediction in the formative period between ca. 1960 and 1985. Climate modeling has […]