SOSGEO4301 - Syllabus/achievement requirements

* = the article is in a compendium

@ = the article is available online

How to find an article on the reading list

@Adger, WN et al. (2009) Are there social limits to adaptation to climate change? Climatic Change 93:335-354. Available online

@Adger, W.N. et al. (2013) Cultural dimensions of climate change impacts and adaptation. Nature Climate Change 3: 112-117. Available online

@Bai, Xuemei, Shi, Peijun and Liu, Yansui (2014) Realizing China's urban dream. Nature 509: 158-160. (3 pages)

@Bassett, T.J. and Fogelman, C. (2013) Deja vu or something new? The adaptation concept in the climate change literature. Geoforum 48: 42-53. Available online

@Butzer, K.W. and G. H. Endfield (2012) Critical perspectives on historical collapse. PNAS 109: 3628-3631. (4 pages). Available online

@Cameron, Emilie S. 2012. Securing Indigenous politics: A critique of the vulnerability and adaptation approach to the human dimensions of climate change in the Canadian Arctic. Global Environmental Change  (12 pages). Available online

* Eriksen, Siri E H; Inderberg, Tor Håkon; O'Brien, Karen; Sygna, Linda. Introduction: Development as usual is not enough. Pages 1-18 in  Climate Change Adaptation and Development: Transforming Paradigms and Practices. Routledge 2015 (18 pages)

@Flood, R.L. 2010. “The Relationship of ‘Systems Thinking’ to Action Research. Systemic Practice and Action Research (23), 269-284. (16 pages). Available online

*Hamilton, Clive. 2010. Requiem for a Species. Earthscan: London [Chapter 7, The Four-Degree World and Chapter 8: Reconstructing a Future], 190-226. (37 pages) (on fronter)

@Hedlund-de Witt, A. (2011) ‘The rising culture and worldview of contemporary spirituality: a sociological study of potentials and pitfalls for sustainable development’, Ecological Economics, 70: 1057–1065. (9 pages). Available online

*Holling, C.S., Gunderson, L.H. and D. Ludwig.  2002. “In Quest of a Theory of Adaptive Change” Chapter 1 (pages 3-24) in Gunderson and Holling (eds) Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems.  Washington: Island Press (22 pages)

@IPCC (2014) Summary for Policy Makers from Synthesis Report. (32 pages) Available online

@Ireland, P. and McKinnon, K. (2013) Strategic localism for an uncertain world: A postdevelopment approach to climate change adaptation. Geoforum 47: 158-166. Available online

*Kegan, R. and K. Lahey. 2009. “Reconceiving the Challenge of Change“ Chapter 1 (pages 11-30) in Immunity to Change.   Boston: Harvard Business Press. (20 pages)

*Marks, R.B. (2012) 'Controlling' Nature in the People's Republic of China, 1949-Present. Chapter 7 in China: its environment and history, Lanham, Md: Rowman & Littlefield. 438 pages. [UHS 304.20951 Mar] (66 pages)

@Meadows, D. Leverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System. Sustainability Institute. (19 pages). Available online

@Nielsen, J. Ø. and Sejersen, F. 2012. Earth System Science, the IPCC and the problem of downward causation in human geographies of Global Climate Change. Danish Journal of Geography 112(2): 194-202. (9 pages) Available online

@Norgaard, Kari Marie. 2006. 'We Don't Really Want to Know' The Social Experience of Global Warming: Dimensions of Denial and Environmental Justice" Organization and Environment 19(3): 347-470. Available online

*Pelling, M., Manuel-Navarrete, D.,  and Redclift, M. (2012) “Climate Change and the Crisis of Capitalism” Chapter 1 in  M. Pelling, D. Manuel-Navarrete and M. Redclift (eds), Climate Change and the Crisis of Capitalism: A Change to Reclaim Self, Society and Nature, Routledge.

@O’Brien, Karen. 2012. Global Environmental Change (II): From Adaptation to Deliberate Transformation: Progress in Human Geography  (10 pages). Available online

O’Brien, K. 2011. Responding to Environmental Change: A New Age for Human Geography? Progress in Human Geography: 1-10. (10 pages). Available online

O’Brien, K. and Selboe E. (2015) Climate Change as an Adaptive Challenge. Chapter 1 in The Adaptive Challenge of Climate Change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (Will be available by August 2015)

O’Brien, K. (2015) Social transformations to sustainability: Is it time for a quantum leap? WIRES Climate Change (under review)

@Park, S.E. et al. (2012) Informing adaptation responses to climate change through theories of transformation. Global Environmental Change 22: 115-126. Available online

*Peterman, William. (1994) Quantum Theory and Geography: What can Dr. Bertlmann Teach us? Professional Geographer 46(1):1-9. (9 pages)

@Schlitz, M.M., Vieten, C. and Miller, E.M. (2010) “Worldview transformation and the development of social consciousness”, Journal of Consciousness Studies, 17 (7-8): 18-36.  (19 pages). Available online

@Shove, E. (2010) Beyond the ABC: climate change policy and theories of social change”, Environment and Planning A, 42: 1273-1285. (13 pages). Available online

Sieferle, Rolf Peter (1990) "The Energy System. A Basic Concept of Environmental History", in: Brimblecombe, P., and Pfister, C. (eds), The Silent Countdown (New York: Springer), pp. 9-20. (Addition: 4 pages "Postscript" that Sieferle wrote for our Norwegian translation.) (Will be available by August 2015)

@Sieferle, Rolf Peter 2011. «Cultural Evolution and Social Metabolism», Geografiska Annaler. Series B. 93(4), 315-324.

@Steffen, W., Crutzen, P.J., NcNeill, J.R. (2007) The Anthropocene: Are Humans Now Overwhelmingthe Great Forces of Nature. Ambio 36(8): 614-621. (8 pages) Available online

@Swyngedouw, E. (2010) Apocalypse Forever? Post-political Populism and the Spectre of Climate Change, Theory, Culture & Society, Vol. 27(2–3): 213–232. (20 pages). Available online

*Taylor, Marcus (2015) Socialising climate. Pages 26-49 in The Political Ecology of Climate Change Adaptation. (24 pages)

@Thornes, J.E. (2008) A Rough Guide to Environmental Art. Annual Review of Environment and Resources 3: 391-411. Available online

*Watts, Simon and Stenner, Paul. (2012) “Introducing Q methodology: the inverted factor technique” and “Theory and Q Methodology: from Stephenson to constructionism”. Pages 1-49 in Doing Q Methodological Research: Theory, Method and Interpretation. London: Sage.

*Wendt, Alexander (2015) Preface to a quantum social science. Pages 1-36 in Quantum Mind and Social Science: Unifying Physical and Social Ontology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (37 pages)

@Willow, A. 2014. The new politics of environmental degradation: un/expected landscapes of disempowerment and vulnerability. Journal of Political Ecology 21: 237-257. Available online

@Zehr, Stephen (2015). The sociology of global climate change. WIRES Climate Change 6: 129-150. Available online

 

Information

The compendium will be available at Kopiutsalget at the bookstore Akademika at Blindern. Please bring your student card.

Published May 26, 2015 12:40 PM - Last modified Aug. 17, 2015 1:36 PM