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Communicating Climate Knowledge

This forum article is the product of interdisciplinary discussion at a conference on climate histories held in Cambridge, United Kingdom, in early 2011, with the specific aim of building a network around the issue of communicating cultural knowledge of environmental change. The lead articles, by Kir...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Current anthropology 2012-04, Vol.53 (2), p.226-244
Main Authors: Diemberger, Hildegard, Hastrup, Kirsten, Schaffer, Simon, Kennel, Charles F., Sneath, David, Bravo, Michael, Graf, Hans-F., Hobbs, Jacqueline, Davis, Jason, Nodari, Maria Luisa, Vassena, Giorgio, Irvine, Richard, Evans, Christopher, Strathern, Marilyn, Hulme, Mike, Kaser, Georg, Bodenhorn, Barbara
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:This forum article is the product of interdisciplinary discussion at a conference on climate histories held in Cambridge, United Kingdom, in early 2011, with the specific aim of building a network around the issue of communicating cultural knowledge of environmental change. The lead articles, by Kirsten Hastrup as an anthropologist and Simon Schaffer as a historian of science, highlight the role of agents and proxies. These are followed by five interdisciplinary commentaries, which engage with the lead articles through new ethnographic material, and a set of shorter commentaries by leading scholars of different disciplines. Finally, the lead authors respond to the discussion. In this debate, climate change does not emerge as a single preformed "problem." Rather, different climate knowledges appear as products of particular networks and agencies. Just as the identification of proxies creates agents (ice, mountains, informants) by inserting them into new networks, we hope that these cross-disciplinary exchanges will produce further conversations and new approaches to action.
ISSN:0011-3204
1537-5382
DOI:10.1086/665033