Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a...

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Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014

Transcript of Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a...

Page 1: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Heide Hackmann

Stockholm, 31 January 2014

Page 2: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

1. Introduction: process, objectives and audiences

2. Why a world social science report on global environmental change?

3. Content of the report

4. Key messages

5. Conclusion

Page 3: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Introduction1. Achievements2. Resources3. Challenges and opportunities

Page 4: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

• International Editorial Team and Scientific Advisory Committee

• Global call for contributions and commissioned papers: 150+ authors from 23 disciplines and all regions of the world

• External peer review (40+ reviewers)• Co-published with UNESCO and the OECD• Publication formats: print, OECD iLibrary• Interactive blog

Process

Page 5: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Objectives

• Develop a social science understanding of global environmental change

• Showcase unique social science contributions

• Assess capacities, also to link science with policy and action

• Influence research programming and funding

• Mobilise the wider social science community

Page 6: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Audiences

• Social scientists• Their colleagues in other

fields• International scientific

organisations and programmes

• Research funders• Decision makers, policy

shapers, practitioners and other users

Page 7: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Why a World Social Science Report on global environmental change?

1. Achievements2. Resources3. Challenges and opportunities

Page 8: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Climate change “threatens our planet, our only home”

Thomas Stocker,IPCC Co-Chair, 27 September 2013

Timely knowledge

Page 9: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Indispensable knowledge

• The inseparability of environmental and social problems

• The centrality of people

• The urgent need for social transformation

Page 10: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Content of the report1. Achievements2. Resources3. Challenges and opportunities

Page 11: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Conceptual framework

The Transformative Cornerstones of Social Science Research for Global Change(ISSC Report: Hackmann and Lera St Clair, 2012)

Social science questions that have to be asked regardless of the concrete problem being addressed

Page 12: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

• The complexity and urgency of global environmental change and sustainability

• Real-world consequences of global environmental change in different geographic, cultural and personal contexts

Page 13: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

• The role of values, worldviews and belief systems in interpreting and responding to threats

• Conditions and visions for change in a rapidly changing world

Page 14: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

• Ethical approaches and concerns about justice in developing policy solutions to global environmental change problems

• New approaches to governance and decision-making at different scales

Page 15: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

• Social science capacities to undertake research on global environmental change

• Annexes:• Statistics on the production of social science research• Bibliometric analysis of social science research on climate

change and global environmental change

Page 16: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Key messagesand priority action steps

1. Achievements2. Resources3. Challenges and opportunities

Page 17: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

A new social science for sustainability

• Bolder in reframing global environmental change as a social process

• Better at infusing social science knowledge into real-world problem-solving

• Bigger in terms of having more social scientists addressing the issue

• Different in terms of its thinking and practice

Page 18: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Environmental change as social change

Frame the

change

Enable the

change

Build capacity

for change

• Developing social lenses• Revealing the social,

economic, political and cultural nature of the challenge

• Highlighting the role of people, behaviours, practices, institutions

• Opening up spaces for social innovation

Page 19: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Solutions that work for people and the planet

Frame the change

Enable the

change

Build capacity for

change

• Closing the gap between the pace of global environmental change and social responses

• Leading engagement with decision makers

• Working with societies in specific social-ecological settings

• Building open knowledge systems and networks of mutual learning

Page 20: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Meeting growing knowledge needs

Frame the change

Enable the

change

Build capacity

for change

• Increasing research production: human capital and institutional resources

• Building critical mass and communities of practice

• Communicating effectively and using what is already known

• Leading in integrated, solutions-oriented research

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Transforming knowledge production and use

Frame the change

Enable the

change

Build capacity

for change

• Embracing interdisciplinarity• Integrating across scales• Building bridges across

different forms of knowledge• Getting serious about the co-

design and co-production of knowledge and action with policy makers, practitioners, civil society and private sector actors

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Conclusion1. Achievements2. Resources3. Challenges and opportunities

Page 23: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

The 2013 World Social Science Report

• A starting point for rallying further social science engagement

• A basis for discussion and the development of mobilisation and resource strategies

Page 24: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

Moving in the right direction …

“Transformations to Sustainability” global funding programmeto be launched by the ISSC in 2014

Page 25: Heide Hackmann Stockholm, 31 January 2014. 1.Introduction: process, objectives and audiences 2.Why a world social science report on global environmental.

www.oecd-ilibrary.org/