Class Research Resources and Assignments

Week 5
Video of Lectures


A 'Southern' Perspective on Climate Change
William Moomaw & Timothy Weiskel
[Visit of guest speaker postponed... stay tuned for possible future scheduling...]

Adil Najam - Director of the Boston University Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future

Mr. Najam teaches courses on: Developing Countries and the Global Politics of Sustainable Development and International Multilateral Negotiation and Directs an important new Center at Boston University.

Adil Najam, et. al., "Climate negotiations beyond Kyoto: developing countries concerns and interests," Climate Policy, 3 (2003), pp. 221–231.

Adil Najam, et. al., "Integrating sustainable development into the Fourth Assessment: Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change," Climate Policy, (2003).

Adil Najam and Cutler J. Cleveland, "Energy and Sustainable Development at Global Environmental Summits: An Evolving Agenda," Environment, Development and Sustainability, 5 (2003), pp. 117–138.

You should become familiar with the proceedings of the World Climate Conference (COP 13) in Bali, Indonesia (December 3-15, 2007). Links to the complete video-webcasts of the plenery sessions and related news briefings are available by clicking on the COP 13 - Bali Conference link.

The UNFCCC -- the convening body for the Bali Conference -- has provided access to important selected photos, documents and videocasts through a convenient summary page on their website. They have been highly motivated to get the news out about this conference, in part, because they do not want to rely on the corporate press to get this information to the people. As a result they have posted their key summaries directly to YouTube. In addition, further current news on climate issues is available through the news titles in the right hand column and the <== climate news portals listed at the left.

Was Bali more important that we realized?
Would this story be reported if the dramatic scenes of Bali had not taken place?
Richard Black
  "US to set 'binding' climate goals," BBC News Online, (25 February 2008, 16:13 GMT Monday).

Background:

      In the past it was customary to recognize the cultural divide between the so-called "East" and the "West," but growing issues of persistant poverty, debt and development have highlighted the growing gap between countries of the industrial world in the 'North' and those in the tropics, or the global 'South.' Just as many different perspectives on climate change issues have developed in the countries of the 'North', so, too, in the global 'South' a wide variety of view points of view have emerged. Scientists from regions in the global South have participated in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). In this context their views have added a global perspective to the concerns of the scientific community based principally in the industrialized world.


      Because of the complexity of the global climate system, changes in global climate will not affect all areas equally or in the same manner. Some areas are likely to experience shifts in temperature and rainfall that will place them under considerable stress, and their ability to respond effectively will depend in part on the resources they can mobilize in response to change. In general this will mean that populations in poorer countries in the global South may well be more vulnerable to climate change than those in the industrial countries of the North. At the same time, it is apparent to those monitoring global greenhouse gas emissions that the majority of these have in the past come from countries in the North and for several years to come this will continue to be the case.

      The result of this asymmetry is that there are sometimes different perspectives and frquently a marked differences in the sense of urgency about climate issues in the countries of the global North and those of the global South. The following news items, for example, highlight some of the striking differences that have already emerged and are likely to increase as climate change proceeds.

Kirby, Alex
  "'Climate change cancels debt'," BBC World Service, (19 September 1999 at 23:10 GMT 00:10 UK, Sunday).
Kirby, Alex
  "Climate treaty 'robs the poor'," BBC World Service, (6 November, 2000, 13:09 GMT Monday).
Kirby, Alex
  "Warming world's winners and losers," BBC World Service, (8 November, 2000, 19:00 GMT, Wednesday).
 
"The researchers have established that those most at risk from global warming produce the smallest quantities of greenhouse gases."
BBC
2006 "Africa climate change warning," BBC News Online, (29 October 2006).


Additional Readings:

Jeremy K. Leggett
  2001 The Carbon War: Global Warming and the End of the Oil Era (N.Y., Routeledge, 2001), entire.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, (IPCC)
  2001 Climate Change 2001: Working Group II: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, (IPCC), (2001).
 

Consider in particular the sections devoted to: Africa, Asia, Latin America and Small Island States.


and more recently:

Athanasiou, Tom

  2007 The Inconvenient Truth, Part II - an EcoEquity Discussion Paper (18 February 2007).


Scientific Expert Group on Climate Change (SEG), United Nations Foundation - Sigma XI, et al.

  2007 Confronting Climate Change: Avoiding the Unmanageable and Managing the Unavoidable - Report prepared for the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development, (Triangle Park, NC, Washington, DC.,, Sigma Xi, Research, The United Nations Foundation, 26 February 2007).
 
Robin Pomeroy
  2007 "Developing nations hit back on climate change," Mail & Guardian Online (New Zealand), (28 February 2007).
 
The Associated Press
  2007 "Developing nations say rich countries must take responsibility for climate change," The International Herald Tribune, (27 February 2007).

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