SHL Digital is pleased to announce the latest edition of Communicating Climate Risk: A Toolkit. Originating in a climate risk communication project from COP26 Universities Network (now UK Universities Climate Network), this publication was updated and expanded in 2022 and again this year. Weaving contributions by climate scientists and modellers and social scientists together with decolonial, postdevelopment, and ecocritical approaches within the arts and humanities, and informed by fieldwork with policymakers and stakeholders, it explores the social life of ‘climate risk’ across a variety of vital domains.
Delving into the complexities of IPCC reporting, green bonds and ESG labels, and decision analysis under deep uncertainty, Communicating Climate Risk nevertheless seeks always to speak to a broad audience, and to not only shine light into the obscure forces that are shaping the future of our world and our planet, but also provide resources, models, and inspiration for action.
See also:
- Kleineberg Visualisation & Design
- Imagine Alternatives
- UK Universities Climate Network
- Digital Humanities Climate Coalition
- Jo Lindsay Walton and Polina Levontin, Climate Communication: A Working Paper
- Jo Lindsay Walton, ‘What is climate risk?’
- Jo Lindsay Walton, Climate Uncertainty and the Arts: A Working Paper
- Ian Scoones, Navigating Uncertainty: Radical Rethinking for a Turbulent World