Time has become a key reference point for measuring the success, failure, and progress of climate action. Yet, there is little reflection about how time is constructed in these targets, by whom, for what purpose, and to what effect. While the academic debate about time in energy and climate studies reflects the broad nature of techno-economic and socio-institutional analyses, we argue that temporal dynamics are not only tied to questions of technological choices and scientific knowledge-making but also broader social and political change. In this roundtable, we outline how we can engage with the contested nature of time and temporality in climate change activism. The discussion starts from the observation that the climate change movement ...
The author discusses one of the most significant subtexts to political discourse on global warming, ...
The crisis of climate change is a difficult phenomenon to conceptualize, particularly in light of ho...
Climate change is often said to herald the anthropocene, where humans become active participants in ...
Time has become a key reference point for measuring the success, failure, and progress of climate ac...
International audienceWhile comparisons across space are rare in literature on climate movements, ti...
How do time perceptions politicize contestation in the case of climate politics? We argue that acros...
This chapter explores how time and temporality – that is, the rhythms and tempos of social and envir...
Time is at the heart of understanding climate change, from the perspective of both natural and socia...
Time is at the heart of understanding climate change, from the perspective of both natural and socia...
This article elaborates the multiple temporalities of climate change discourses and practises and di...
This article compares two dominating conceptual frameworks of the current global environmental crisi...
Recent discussions of climate change in multiple domains—the academic literature, the popular press,...
Truth, Trust and Temporality: climate communication in times of emergency Introduction The importa...
Taking inspiration from Walter Benjamin's “Theses on the Philosophy of History,” this article discus...
This article turns toward scientific literature to consider the basic strategies used in presenting ...
The author discusses one of the most significant subtexts to political discourse on global warming, ...
The crisis of climate change is a difficult phenomenon to conceptualize, particularly in light of ho...
Climate change is often said to herald the anthropocene, where humans become active participants in ...
Time has become a key reference point for measuring the success, failure, and progress of climate ac...
International audienceWhile comparisons across space are rare in literature on climate movements, ti...
How do time perceptions politicize contestation in the case of climate politics? We argue that acros...
This chapter explores how time and temporality – that is, the rhythms and tempos of social and envir...
Time is at the heart of understanding climate change, from the perspective of both natural and socia...
Time is at the heart of understanding climate change, from the perspective of both natural and socia...
This article elaborates the multiple temporalities of climate change discourses and practises and di...
This article compares two dominating conceptual frameworks of the current global environmental crisi...
Recent discussions of climate change in multiple domains—the academic literature, the popular press,...
Truth, Trust and Temporality: climate communication in times of emergency Introduction The importa...
Taking inspiration from Walter Benjamin's “Theses on the Philosophy of History,” this article discus...
This article turns toward scientific literature to consider the basic strategies used in presenting ...
The author discusses one of the most significant subtexts to political discourse on global warming, ...
The crisis of climate change is a difficult phenomenon to conceptualize, particularly in light of ho...
Climate change is often said to herald the anthropocene, where humans become active participants in ...