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E-grāmata: Resolving the Climate Crisis: US Social Scientists Speak Out

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This book brings together a team of renowned social scientists to ask not why climate change is happening, but how we might learn from its human dimensions to raise public and political will to fight against the climate crisis.

Despite efforts for mitigation, global emission levels continue to increase annually and the world’s wealthiest nations, including all of the G20 countries, have failed to meet their Paris Climate Goals. In the absence of political will, many have called for individuals to act on climate change by mitigating their own carbon footprint through having fewer children, driving less, using LED lightbulbs, or by becoming vegetarians. While compelling, individual lifestyle changes on this scale are unlikely to prevent climate disaster. Resolving the Climate Crisis presents informed solutions for social change that pay attention to human behavior and emotions, political systems, and societal structures. Across a series of concise and accessible chapters, authors explore potential solutions to climate change, addressing topics including Indigenous ecologies, LGBTQ+ community engagement, renewable energy technologies and climate justice. Their expert engagement with the social and behavioural sciences makes this book not only an essential handbook of climate change solutions but also an innovative model for public-facing social science scholarship.

Resolving the Climate Crisis will be an essential resource for students and researchers of climate change, as well as policy makers working to develop meaningful strategies for combatting the climate crisis.



This book brings together a team of renowned social scientists to ask not why climate change is happening, but how we might learn from its human dimensions to raise public and political will to fight against the climate crisis.

Introduction

Engaging Social Science Knowledge to Resolve the Climate Crisis

Kristin Haltinner and Dilshani Sarathchandra

Part 1: Rejecting Our Toxic Cultural Stories

Chapter 1: A Community-University Collaboration for Climate Justice

David N. Pellow

Chapter 2: Towards Earthbound Climate Movements: The Importance of
Understanding Ontology and Settler Colonialism in Engaging the Climate
Crisis

David Osborn

Chapter 3: Gender and Climate Justice

Christina Ergas

Part 2: Recognizing Existing Use of Alternative Stories

Chapter 4: Doing Ones Part of the Job: The Norwegian Dugnad Tradition in a
Global Climate Perspective

Anne Kristine Haugestad and Kari Marie Norgaard

Chapter 5: In/Action in Addressing the Climate Crisis: The Possibilities of
Generation Z

Hannah Block, Cailin Lorek, and Ryan Alaniz

Chapter 6: Queer Political Culture in the Face of the Climate Crisis

Melanie M. Bowers and Cameron T. Whitley

Part 3: Changing the Stories

Chapter 7: Overcoming Hurdles to Climate Mitigation: How Motivational
Barriers Impact Strategies for Change

Samantha Noll

Chapter 8: We are the Collective

Kristin Haltinner

Chapter 9: Insights from Social and Behavioral Sciences to Motivate Climate
Action

Dilshani Sarathchandra

Chapter 10: ACT Now: Words, Actions, and Values in Tackling the Human
Dimensions of the Climate Crisis

Jack DeWaard

Part 4: Amplifying Stories on the Margins

Chapter 11: Dismantling the Settler Paradigm in Indigenous Climate
Resilience

Aiyana James and Laura Laumatia

Chapter 12: Criminalizing Climate Change: Defining and Responding to Ecocide

Taylor June, Hollie Nyseth Nzitatira, and Nicole Fox

Chapter 13: Framing the Climate Crisis: A Sociological Lens through
Documentary Film

Cedric A. L. Taylor

Part 5: Organizing Through a New Ethic

Chapter 14: From Vulnerability to Co-Production: Centering Indigenous
Ecologies in Arctic Climate Adaptation

P. Joshua Griffin

Chapter 15: Closing the Social Gap in the Deployment of Renewable Energy
Technologies

David Bidwell and Shannon Howley

Chapter 16: Futures Born of the Past and Present: Building Transitions as
Collaborative Projects of Justice

Tristan Partridge and Javiera Barandiarįn

Chapter 17: Listening and Building Trust: Community-Led Conservation in
Lincoln, Montana

Ryanne Pilgeram and Jordan Reeves

Chapter 18: Cattle Grazing and Climate Change Adaptation: Local Environmental
Knowledge and Public Lands Management in the US West

Chloe B. Wardropper and Nicolas T. Bergmann

Conclusion

How to Mobilize Public Will to Resolve the Climate Crisis

Kristin Haltinner and Dilshani Sarathchandra

Index
Kristin Haltinner is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Idaho.

Dilshani Sarathchandra is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Idaho.