Contact for reporters:
Mary Guiden
(970) 491-6892
[email protected]
Watch a video, hear from members of CSU’s delegation: https://col.st/wkfOy
A team of Colorado State University faculty and graduate students is attending the 24th session of the United Nations Climate Change conference, which kicked off Dec. 2 in Katowice, Poland.
The event, known as the Conference of Parties or COP, is a unique opportunity to observe international public policy negotiations on a massive scale, said Ken Shockley, an associate professor, the Holmes Rolston III Chair in Environmental Ethics and Philosophy and an affiliate faculty member with the School of Global Environmental Sustainability at CSU.
Shockley, who is the official head of CSU’s delegation, first attended the Conference of the Parties in Durban, South Africa, in 2011.
He sat down with SOURCE recently to discuss what he hopes to see and accomplish at this COP.
Q: What’s your area of expertise in the climate change realm?
Shockley: I study the ethical dimensions of climate change and the relation of climate change to sustainable development, and particularly the way in which the climate talks and related policies conceptualize questions of loss and damage. That matters a whole lot when you consider the intersection between development and climate change.
I also study the notion of equity between states and the way in which current capabilities of dealing with climate change are tied to historical responsibilities.
And I am interested in how the political landscape has conceptually changed, particularly with the participation of non-state actors, which I wrote about for The Conversation.
Q: What do you mean by “loss and damage”?
Shockley: The losses associated with climate change – direct and indirect harms. That means the way in which changes in flooding or water use will lead to people sufferingIt might also be tied in with the opportunities that are available to people in virtue of their geographical and cultural backgrounds. When we worry about what we’re trying to protect for development, that makes a huge difference.