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Anthroposphere
Aug 23, 2019
And the Water is Coming
Artificial Disaster in Laos and the Risk Society By Yujia Bian “The water is coming!” shouted residents from southern Laos’ Attapeau...
Anthroposphere
Aug 18, 2019
The Complex Link between Climate Change and Conflict in the Lake Chad Basin Region
By Rory Wilson The Lake Chad Basin Region Crisis is the worst humanitarian crisis you have never heard of. The United Nations estimates...
Anthroposphere
Aug 17, 2019
Food security and related socio-ecological issues in pre-historic and contemporary Fiji
By Katerina Grypma The Lapita people, enigmatic seafarers and expert navigators of the prehistoric Pacific Ocean, are recognised as the...
Anthroposphere
Aug 14, 2019
Democracy is Fracked
By Alexander Moss Offshore fracking has been used since the 1970s to extract gas from the gas rich areas concentrated in the south of the...
Anthroposphere
Aug 12, 2019
How Weather Lost Its Innocence
An Illustrated History of Extreme Weather Attribution By Kai Kornhuber & Amy Howden-Chapman Extreme Weather Attribution Twenty thousand...
Anthroposphere
Jul 21, 2019
Truth as Optimism: An Interview with Danny Cullenward
By Freya Chay Danny Cullenward is an energy economist and lawyer working on the design and implementation of scientifically grounded...
Anthroposphere
Jul 12, 2019
Undermining employment in Mainland Greece
By Sarah Yolanda Koss Halkidiki, a region in Northern Greece, is commonly described as Greece's most precious coastal area. However, the...
Anthroposphere
Jul 5, 2019
False Negative? BECCS, Climate Realism, and the Quest for Negative Emissions
By James A. King “As we come to the end of the 24th century, the world looks very different. Climate change hit us hard in the years...
Anthroposphere
Jun 28, 2019
How Renewable Energy Can, and Should, Address Environmental Racism
March 2019. “The land is my mother, not your ATM” chant dozens of protesters in front of the Executive Yuan, Taiwan’s highest executive body
Anthroposphere
Jun 15, 2019
Moving Perspectives: Biology is Technology
"Moving Perspectives" – an art collaboration investigating the binary concepts of nature and technology.
Anthroposphere
Jun 15, 2019
Reading Dingo Stories
In wanting to be embodied, Bird Rose suggests that life seeks to find a way – across death and air.
Anthroposphere
Jun 15, 2019
Within and Without
Within and Without conjures moments of enchantment and reveals processes of time, change, growth, and decay.
Anthroposphere
Jun 15, 2019
The Climate Election that Wasn't
Our reporter, Kristi Cheng, investigates what the 2019 Australian election results mean for climate policy in the country.
Anthroposphere
Jun 15, 2019
A Climate of Denial
“It was catastrophic, gut wrenching and incredibly disturbing….That's when we knew that we'd lost that site”
Anthroposphere
May 26, 2019
Earth Day: Clinicians and Planetary Health
By Erika Veidis Human health, by almost any measure, is better now than at any point in human history. In the last century, we’ve seen...
Anthroposphere
May 23, 2019
Australian Federal Budget exposes Public Negligence on Climate Change
By Jack Kelly Falling taxes and Australia going into surplus for the first time in over a decade: definitely a good news budget. But did...
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