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{
  "authors": [
    "Michèle Audin",
    "Liliana Gamboa",
    "Noah Gordon",
    "Emily Hardy",
    "Marissa Jordan",
    "Ian Klaus",
    "Daniel Levin Becker",
    "Aromar Revi",
    "Seth Schultz"
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    "Subnational Affairs",
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Event

Climate Science, Policy, Fiction, and Narrative: Framing the Upcoming Special Report on Cities and Climate Change

Tue, April 2nd, 2024

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Program

Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics

The Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program explores how climate change and the responses to it are changing international politics, global governance, and world security. Our work covers topics from the geopolitical implications of decarbonization and environmental breakdown to the challenge of building out clean energy supply chains, alternative protein options, and other challenges of a warming planet.

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Program

Carnegie California

Carnegie California links developments in California and the West Coast with national and global conversations around technology, democracy, and trans-Pacific relationships. At a distance from national capitals, and located in one of the world’s great experiments in pluralist democracy, Carnegie California engages a wide array of stakeholders as partners in its research and policy engagement.


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On April 16, scientists, academics, and other experts will convene in Riga, Latvia, for the scoping meeting for the Special Report on Climate Change and Cities, to be included in the Seventh Assessment Report (AR7) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The Special Report on Climate Change and Cities will be the only special report in AR7, and the scoping meeting will set out its structure, focus, and frame.  

Scoping meeting participants, including some of the world’s leading climate scientists and city experts, will draw on a huge body of knowledge produced by scholars, city networks, and IPCC authors, including the Summary for Urban Policymakers, a city-focused distillation of the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report. Even with this deep body of work, the run-up to the Riga meeting presents an important window for experts to broaden their knowledge, widen their imagination, and test the narratives that will inform the outcome.  

Join the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace for a special discussion that will bring together IPCC authors (including some who will participate in Riga), climate policy experts, and writers using fiction and narrative to push the boundaries of science and policy. The conversation will include an overview of the upcoming Special Report; readings from Indivisible Cities, in which authors from the French literary collective Oulipo collaborate with members of the international science and policy communities to develop new fictional representations of cities under climate pressure; and a wider discussion of the role of narratives in advancing climate action. 

Subnational AffairsClimate Change

Event Speakers

Michèle Audin

Michèle Audin is a mathematician specializing in symplectic geometry and the author of books on the history of mathematics and the Paris Commune, as well as several books of fiction including, most recently, Paris, boulevard Voltaire suivi de Ponts (L’Arbalète Gallimard, 2023). She has been a member of the literary collective Oulipo since 2009.

Michèle Audin
Liliana Gamboa
Nonresident Scholar, Carnegie California; Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program
Liliana Gamboa
Noah Gordon
Fellow, Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program and Fellow, Europe Program
Noah Gordon
Emily Hardy
Former James C. Gaither Junior Fellow, Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program
Emily Hardy
Marissa Jordan
Program Manager, Carnegie California
Marissa Jordan
Ian Klaus
Founding Director, Carnegie California
Ian Klaus
Daniel Levin Becker

Daniel Levin Becker is the author of Many Subtle Channels (Harvard, 2012) and What’s Good (City Lights, 2022) and the translator of, most recently, Jakuta Alikavazovic’s Like a Sky Inside (Fern, 2024), Éric Chevillard’s Museum Visits (Yale, 2024), and Laurent Mauvignier’s The Birthday Party (Fitzcarraldo/Transit, 2023), which was longlisted for the International Booker Prize. He has been a member of the literary collective Oulipo since 2009.

Daniel Levin Becker
Aromar Revi

Aromar Revi is the director of the Indian Institute for Human Settlements India’s prospective Institution of Eminence and interdisciplinary national University focused on urbanization.

Aromar Revi
Seth Schultz

Seth Schultz is the CEO of Resilience Rising. A globally recognized innovator and thought leader, he has a long track record of building consensus and initiating change in the field of sustainable development, urban climate action, and resilient infrastructure.

Seth Schultz

Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

Event Speakers

Michèle Audin

Michèle Audin is a mathematician specializing in symplectic geometry and the author of books on the history of mathematics and the Paris Commune, as well as several books of fiction including, most recently, Paris, boulevard Voltaire suivi de Ponts (L’Arbalète Gallimard, 2023). She has been a member of the literary collective Oulipo since 2009.

Liliana Gamboa

Nonresident Scholar, Carnegie California; Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program

Liliana Gamboa is a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Carnegie California and in the Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program. Liliana most recently was program manager at the Open Society Foundations. Liliana has over fifteen years of experience working in the human rights field, in work that ranges from designing and implementing anti-discrimination projects in Dominican Republic, Colombia, and Chile to climate justice work in the Caribbean.

Noah Gordon

Fellow, Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program and Fellow, Europe Program

Noah  Gordon ​​​​

Noah J. Gordon is a fellow in the Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, DC.

Emily Hardy

Former James C. Gaither Junior Fellow, Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program

Emily Hardy was a James C. Gaither Junior Fellow in the Carnegie Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program.

Marissa Jordan

Program Manager, Carnegie California

Marissa Jordan

Marissa Jordan is the program manager of Carnegie California at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. She has a master’s degree in conflict analysis and resolution from the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution at George Mason University. Her previous research has focused on how anti–human trafficking service providers understand climate change’s role in driving human trafficking in their particular regions.

Ian Klaus

Founding Director, Carnegie California

Ian Klaus is the founding director of Carnegie California. He is a leading scholar on the nexus of urbanization, geopolitics, and global challenges, with extensive experience as a practitioner of subnational diplomacy.

Daniel Levin Becker

Daniel Levin Becker is the author of Many Subtle Channels (Harvard, 2012) and What’s Good (City Lights, 2022) and the translator of, most recently, Jakuta Alikavazovic’s Like a Sky Inside (Fern, 2024), Éric Chevillard’s Museum Visits (Yale, 2024), and Laurent Mauvignier’s The Birthday Party (Fitzcarraldo/Transit, 2023), which was longlisted for the International Booker Prize. He has been a member of the literary collective Oulipo since 2009.

Aromar Revi

Aromar Revi is the director of the Indian Institute for Human Settlements India’s prospective Institution of Eminence and interdisciplinary national University focused on urbanization.

Seth Schultz

Seth Schultz is the CEO of Resilience Rising. A globally recognized innovator and thought leader, he has a long track record of building consensus and initiating change in the field of sustainable development, urban climate action, and resilient infrastructure.

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