(6 November) NEW papers now published. The following four papers are now all published on-line: Turnhout,E., Dewulf,A. and Hulme,M. (2016) ‘What does policy-relevant global environmental knowledge do? The cases of climate and biodiversity‘ Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 18, 65-72; Hulme,M. (2015) ‘Finding the message of the Pope’s Encyclical‘ Environment 57(6), 16-19; Hulme,M. (2015) ‘Changing […]
Publications – Recent
‘(Still) Disagreeing about climate change: what way forward?’
(30 October) NEW paper. ‘(Still) Disagreeing about climate change: what way forward?’ will be published in the next issue (December 2015) of Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science.
‘What does policy-relevant global environmental knowledge do?’
(26 October) NEW paper. ‘What does policy-relevant global environmental knowledge do? The cases of climate and biodiversity‘. Written with Dutch colleagues Esther Turnhout and Art Dewulf, this paper will appear shortly in Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability.
‘Varieties of religious engagement with climate change’
(26 August 2015) NEW manuscript. ‘Varieties of religious engagement with climate change‘, my contribution to the forthcoming Routledge Handbook on Religion and Ecology (edited by Mary Tucker, Willis Jenkins and John Grim).
‘Framing global biodiversity. IPBES between Mother Earth and ecosystem services’
(14 June) NEW Publication. “Framing global biodiversity. IPBES between Mother Earth and ecosystem services” published on-line in Environmental Science and Policy with my PhD student Maud Borie.
‘Better weather? The cultivation of the sky’
(27 May) NEW Publication. “Better weather? The cultivation of the sky” published Open-Access in Cultural Anthropology.
‘Climate and its changes: a cultural appraisal’
(25 May) NEW Publication. “Climate and its changes: a cultural appraisal” published in the new Open-Access journal from the Royal Geographical Society, GEO: Geography and Environment.
‘Climate’ – a Lexicon entry
(24 May) NEW Publication. “Climate” — an entry in the Living Lexicon for the Environmental Humanities.
Who speaks for the future of Earth? How critical social scientists can extend the conversation of the Anthropocene
(13 April) NEW Publication. “Who speaks for the future of Earth? How critical social scientists can extend the conversation of the Anthropocene” has been accepted for publication in Global Environmental Change. Eva Lovbrand, myself and 6 co-authors argue that social scientists should not take for granted the framings of the Anthropocene offered by natural scientists.
‘Climate emergencies do not justify engineering the climate’
(30 March) NEW Publication: ‘Climate emergencies do not justify engineering the climate‘ recently published in Nature Climate Change. We argue that current climate engineering proposals do not come close to addressing the complex and contested nature of conceivable ‘climate emergencies’ resulting from unabated greenhouse-gas emissions.
