Professor Neil Adger - EPA Climate Change Lecture Series - Cork City Hall
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 22 ธ.ค. 2024
- www.epa.ie/res... - "Adapting to climate risks to make us happier and healthier"- The EPA, as part of the National Dialogue on Climate Action, recently hosted a hybrid public lecture in Cork City Hall with Professor Neil Adger, University of Exeter
In this lecture, guest Speaker Professor Neil Adger will explore how climate change poses risks to life and livelihoods through flood risk, heatwaves, wildfires and drought. Yet investing in climate adaptation actions also comes with risks: not being seen as legitimate, closing off future options, and not being effective in the first place. This lecture proposes ways to ensure health and wellbeing are accounted for when planning for floods and will examine whether people are made healthier and happier by strategies such as hard engineering, managed retreat, or by living with risk. Professor Adger will draw on new findings from Ireland, the UK and Ghana.
Professor Neil Adger is a Professor of Human Geography at the University of Exeter. He is a leading social scientist on economic and social dynamics of climate change, resilience and vulnerability. He is a Highly Cited Researcher with work published across the social and natural sciences with landmark publications on adaptation to climate change, human security and demography. Neil is also Professor of Human Geography in the College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter.
He is currently leading research on social dynamics of well-being, health, migration and climate change in the UK, Ireland, India, Bangladesh, Ghana and in Australia, with grants from Wellcome Trust, ESRC, FCDO, Belmont Forum, and the National Institute for Health Research.
Neil has served as a Commissioner for the Lancet Commission on Climate and Health 2015, and as Lead Expert for the UK Foresight field-defining report on Migration and Global Environmental Change in 2011. He led the IPCC assessment of human security dimensions of climate change.
The evening was be chaired by broadcaster and journalist Ella McSweeney.
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