SGO4301 - Syllabus/achievement requirements

* = the article is in a compendium

@ = the article is available online

@Adger, WN et al. (2009) Are there social limits to adaptation to climate change? Climatic Change 93:335-354. Available online

@Adger, W.N. et al. (2013) Cultural dimensions of climate change impacts and adaptation. Nature Climate Change 3: 112-117. Available online

@Bassett, T.J. and Fogelman, C. (2013) Deja vu or something new? The adaptation concept in the climate change literature. Geoforum 48: 42-53. Available online

@Biagini, B. et al. (2014) A typology of adaptation actions: A global look at climate adaptation actions financed through the Global Environment Facility. Global Environmental Change (12 pages) Available online

@Brown, K. (2014) Global environmental change I: A social turn for resilience? Progress in Human Geography 38(1): 107-117. Available online

@Brown, K., O’Neill, S. and Fabricius, C. (2013) Social science understandings of transformations. Pages 100-106 in the World Social Science Report 2013: Changing Global Environments. ISSC, UNESCO. Available at http://www.worldsocialscience.org/documents/wss-report-2013-part-1.pdf#page=37

@Butzer, K.W. and G. H. Endfield (2012) Critical perspectives on historical collapse. PNAS 109: 3628-3631. (4 pages). Available online

@Cameron, Emilie S. 2012. Securing Indigenous politics: A critique of the vulnerability and adaptation approach to the human dimensions of climate change in the Canadian Arctic. Global Environmental Change  (12 pages). Available online

@Cardinale, B.J. et al. 2012. Biodiversity loss and its impact on humanity. Nature 486: 59-67. (9 pages). Available online

@Flood, R.L. 2010. “The Relationship of ‘Systems Thinking’ to Action Research. Systemic Practice and Action Research (23), 269-284. (16 pages). Available online

@Gabrys, J. and Yusoff, K. (2011) “Arts, sciences and climate change: Practices and politics at the threshold”, Science as Culture, 21(1): 1-24.  (24 pages). Available online

*Hamilton, Clive. 2010. Requiem for a Species. Earthscan: London [Chapter 7, The Four-Degree World and Chapter 8: Reconstructing a Future], 190-226. (37 pages) (on fronter)

@Hedlund-de Witt, A. (2011) ‘The rising culture and worldview of contemporary spirituality: a sociological study of potentials and pitfalls for sustainable development’, Ecological Economics, 70: 1057–1065. (9 pages). Available online

*Hetherington, R. and Reid, R.G.B. 2010. The Climate Connections: Climate Change and Modern Evolution. Cambridge:Cambridge University Press. Chapter 1: Introduction (pages 1-12) (12 pages)

*Holling, C.S., Gunderson, L.H. and D. Ludwig.  2002. “In Quest of a Theory of Adaptive Change” Chapter 1 (pages 3-24) in Gunderson and Holling (eds) Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems.  Washington: Island Press (22 pages)

@IPCC (2014) Summary for Policy Makers from Working Group II: Impacts, Vulnerability, Adaptation. Available online, 31 March 2014. Available online

@Ireland, P. and McKinnon, K. (2013) Strategic localism for an uncertain world: A postdevelopment approach to climate change adaptation. Geoforum 47: 158-166. Available online

*Kegan, R. and K. Lahey. 2009. “Reconceiving the Challenge of Change“ Chapter 1 (pages 11-30) in Immunity to Change.   Boston: Harvard Business Press. (20 pages)

@Meadows, D. Leverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System. Sustainability Institute. (19 pages). Available online

@Nielsen, J. Ø. and Sejersen, F. 2012. Earth System Science, the IPCC and the problem of downward causation in human geographies of Global Climate Change. Danish Journal of Geography 112(2): 194-202. (9 pages) Available online

@Norgaard, Kari Marie. 2006. 'We Don't Really Want to Know' The Social Experience of Global Warming: Dimensions of Denial and Environmental Justice" Organization and Environment 19(3): 347-470. Available online

*Pelling, M., Manuel-Navarrete, D.,  and Redclift, M. (2012) “Climate Change and the Crisis of Capitalism” Chapter 1 in  M. Pelling, D. Manuel-Navarrete and M. Redclift (eds), Climate Change and the Crisis of Capitalism: A Change to Reclaim Self, Society and Nature, Routledge.

@O’Brien, Karen. 2012. Global Environmental Change (II): From Adaptation to Deliberate Transformation: Progress in Human Geography  (10 pages). Available online

*O'Brien, K. (2009) Do Values Subjectively Define the Limits to Climate Change Adaptation? Pages 164-180 in W.N. Adger, I. Lorenzoni and K. O'Brien (eds.) Adapting to Climate Change: Thresholds, Values, Governance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

@O’Brien, K. (2013) What’s the problem? Putting global environmental change into perspective. Pages 8 – 15 in the World Social Science Report 2013: Changing Global Environments. ISSC, UNESCO. Available online

O’Brien, K. 2011. Responding to Environmental Change: A New Age for Human Geography? Progress in Human Geography: 1-10. (10 pages). Available online

@Park, S.E. et al. (2012) Informing adaptation responses to climate change through theories of transformation. Global Environmental Change 22: 115-126. Available online

@Rowson, J. (2011) “Transforming behavior change: beyond nudge and neuromania”, RSA Report, November 2011. (29 pages). Available online

@Schlitz, M.M., Vieten, C. and Miller, E.M. (2010) “Worldview transformation and the development of social consciousness”, Journal of Consciousness Studies, 17 (7-8): 18-36.  (19 pages). Available online

@Shove, E. (2010) Beyond the ABC: climate change policy and theories of social change”, Environment and Planning A, 42: 1273-1285. (13 pages). Available online

@Steffen, W., Crutzen, P.J., NcNeill, J.R. (2007) The Anthropocene: Are Humans Now Overwhelmingthe Great Forces of Nature. Ambio 36(8): 614-621. (8 pages) Available online

@Swyngedouw, E. (2010) Apocalypse Forever? Post-political Populism and the Spectre of Climate Change, Theory, Culture & Society, Vol. 27(2–3): 213–232. (20 pages). Available online

@Thornes, J.E. (2008) A Rough Guide to Environmental Art. Annual Review of Environment and Resources 3: 391-411. Available online

@Willow, A. 2014. The new politics of environmental degradation: un/expected landscapes of disempowerment and vulnerability. Journal of Political Ecology 21: 237-257. Available online

@Wise, R. M. et al. (2014) Reconceptualising adaptation to climate change as part of pathways of change and response. Global Environmental Change. Available online

Information

The compendium will be available at Kopiutsalget at the bookstore Gnist Akademika at Blindern. Please bring your student card.

Published May 22, 2014 8:27 AM - Last modified June 4, 2014 8:33 AM