1) A new
article from Christopher Pollitt (2015), "Wickedness will not wait:
climate change and public management research", in Public Money and
Management (vol. 35 (3), pp. 181-186).
He abstracts his article as:
"This paper shows that climate change is a ‘wicked’ problem, which
presents multiple challenges for public management. These challenges are
already with us, but are likely to increase in the short and medium terms,
possibly very rapidly. Academic public management research appears to have been
slow to address these issues. Yet potentially there are several strong points
of contact between climate change issues and current public management research
themes. This will, however, require interdisciplinary and international
approaches."
2) A new
article from Noel Castree (2015): "Geography and Global Change Science:
Relationships Necessary, Absent, and Possible", in Geographical Research
(vol. 53 (1), pp. 1-15).
Castree abstracts his paper as: "Initiated by
geoscientists, the growing debate about the Anthropocene, 'planetary
boundaries' and global 'tipping points' is a significant opportunity for
geographers to reconfigure two things: one is the internal relationships among
their discipline's many and varied perspectives (topical, philosophical, and
methodological) on the real; the other the discipline's actual and perceived
contributions to important issues in the wider society. Yet, without concerted
effort and struggle, the opportunity is likely to be used in a 'safe' and
rather predictable way by only a sub-set of human-environment geographers. The socio-environmental
challenges of a post-Holocene world invite old narratives about Geography's
holistic intellectual contributions to be reprised in the present. These
narratives speak well to many geoscientists, social scientists, and
decision-makers outside Geography. However, they risk perpetuating an emaciated
conception of reality wherein Earth systems and social systems are seen as
knowable and manageable if the 'right' ensemble of expertise is achieved. I
argue that we need to get out from under the shadow of these long-standing
narratives. Using suggestive examples, I make the case for forms of inquiry
across the human-physical 'divide' that eschew ontological monism and that
serve to reveal the many legitimate cognitive, moral, and aesthetic framings of
Earth present and future. Geography is unusual in that the potential for these
forms of inquiry to become normalised is high compared with other subjects.
This potential will only be taken advantage of if certain human-environment
geographers unaccustomed to engaging the world of geoscience and environmental
policy change their modus operandi."
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