How do climate models ‘move’?

(18 October)  My paper with Martin Mahony – ‘Model migrations: mobility and boundary crossings in regional climate prediction’ – has been published on-line at Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers.  This is an exploration of the outreach of the Met Office’s PRECIS model, drawing upon theory from STS and geographies of science.

Symposium at Wageningen

(29 September)  ‘Climate change: knowledge, risk and governance’ – I shall be speaking at this symposium at Wageningen School of Social Sciences, Wageningen University on Tuesday 1 November (0900-1600hrs), along with Prof Marjolein van Asselt from Maastricht University.

Science-policy interface: beyond assessments

(8 August)  The participants of  the Leipzig workshop on the role of nested networks in the design of the new Intergovernmenal Platform for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) have correspondence in the journal Science this week.  We suggest the IPCC is not a suitable model for IPBES to follow.

Framing climate change

(5 July)  ‘You’ve been framed: six new ways to understand climate change’.  I join in The Conversation down-under about climate change, public engagement and policy development.  Translations into French and Chinese are available.

Paper published in Osiris

(20 June)  My article ‘Reducing the future to climate: a story of climate determinism and reductionism’ is published today in the history of science journal Osiris, Vol.26(1), pp.245-266.  If you don’t have access to the journal, a version of the submitted manuscript is available here.

How to design IPBES

(17 June)  ‘Making a difference with IPBES’.  The outcome of the Leipzig workshop I participated in on the role of nested networks in the design of the new Intergovernmenal Platform for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) has been posted here.  We suggest the IPCC is not a suitable model for IPBES to follow.