Podcasts on Climate Change from the University of Arizona.
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Podcasts on Climate Change from the University of Arizona. The New ABC show to air in 2009, Earth 2100 is part news cast, part popular imagination of what life will be like given climate predictions by leading scientists combined with resource depletion and rapid population growth. The game EARTH 2100 demonstrates various climatic predictions around the globe and asks participates to create imaginary-docu-videos recounting what life is like given the climate changes. If you make a video it & send it in, the producers might include it in the final TV show. Some of the Comments on the ABC EARTH 2100 game demonstrate faith in the RAPTURE saving us, or the conviction that all this climate change business is mere hype. Others take the reports seriously and urge that we all change our polluting, gas-guzzling, eco-unfriendly habits. On May 29, 2009 the National Science Foundation announced its first major award funded via the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. NSF funded the construction of the Alaska Region Research Vessel (ARRV). This ship is designed specifically for research in icy water and will be used for a wide variety of studies related to global warming in the polar region. The project is expected to create more than 4,000 jobs. For more on this see the NSF website, nsf.gov, and the media report. For those who love the natural world and want to help protect it a big issue is how to get people’s attention. Playing to the media and generating publicity aims to get attention so that people will notice garbage in the oceans, melting glaciers, devastated estuaries, and to get attention so that people will change their habits. Al Gore’s film, An Inconvenient Truth, is probably the most celebrated among attention getters for climate change. A series of lessons in the the documented impact of global warming, this film is now at the center of a broader campaign called Take Part. The Day After Tomorrow is pure Hollywood fiction. My sister-in-law, a very earnest, no-nonsense kind of person, dismissed this film saying that she had asked one of her scientist friends about it and he had assured her that giant hurricanes like this just could not happen. I thought this missed the point. Of course the film is a soapy, soppy, exaggeration. We can still ask what its impact on audiences is. After seeing this film are people (other than my sister-in-law) more aware of pollution? Are they more aware of laws and policies that concern climate change? The Pew Center has taken my sister-in-law’s question more seriously than her scientist-friend did, and used it as an opportunity to explore climate change issues. The dueling voyages of Plastiki and the Junk Raft are two attention grabbers devoted to publicizing plastic pollution in the world’s oceans. If everyone knew about the huge floating conglomeration of plastic in the Pacific Ocean, the so-called “great Pacific garbage patch,” would they buy less plastic? Would they be more careful about recycling plastic? These voyages have been documented and publicized by the PBS Newshour, The National Geographic, The New Yorker, and many other outlets. I have not yet found a source that attempts to measure the impact of any of these examples of celebrity environmentalism. Candice Oster and Paul Starr have produced an in-depth bibliography that contains references to a wide range of scholarship on culture and climate change. See, Culture and Climate Change Annotated Bibliography Climate Change is happening now. Learn about it here. |
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