Facilitating Climate Change Responses: A Report of Two Workshops on Insights from the Social and Behavioral Sciences

January 1st, 2010 | RESEARCH

The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, understanding the need for policy makers at the national level to entrain the behavioral and social sciences in addressing the challenges of global climate change, called on the National Research Council to organize two workshops to showcase some of the decision-relevant contributions that these sciences have already made and can advance with future efforts. The workshops focused on two broad areas: (1) mitigation (behavioral elements of a strategy to reduce the net future human influence on climate) and (2) adaptation (behavioral and social determinants of societal capacity to minimize the damage from climate changes that are not avoided). Facilitating Climate Change Responses documents the information presented in the workshop presentations and discussions. This material illustrates some of the ways the behavioral and social sciences can contribute to the new era of climate research.

Document

(no document provided)

Team Members

Paul Stern, Editor, National Research Council
Roger Kasperson, Editor, National Research Council

Citation

Identifier Type: ISBN
Identifier: 978-0-309-16032-2

Related URLs

Full Text from National Academy Press

Tags

Audience: General Public
Discipline: Climate | Education and learning science | History | policy | law | Social science and psychology
Resource Type: Conference Proceedings | Reference Materials
Environment Type: Professional Development | Conferences | Networks | Professional Development and Workshops