Dear colleagues,

The Emmett Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the UCLA School 
of Law, in partnership with the Solar Radiation Management Governance 
Initiative, the Forum for Climate Engineering Assessment, and the Harvard Solar 
Geoengineering Research Project, is pleased to announce the Sixth International 
Summer School on Geoengineering Governance.

The summer school will take place from August 5 to 11, 2019 at the Banff Centre 
in Banff, Alberta, Canada.  I invite you to circulate this information to 
colleagues and students who might be interested in participating in the summer 
school.  Instructions on how to apply are now posted at 
https://law.ucla.edu/CEGOVsummerschool, with an application deadline of April 
30.

As the severity of climate-change risks and the inability of current response 
efforts to adequately limit risks become clear, climate engineering 
technologies are receiving increasing attention and generating increasing 
controversy. These technological responses appear to offer substantial 
risk-reduction opportunities, serious new risks, and novel and potentially 
severe governance challenges.

To help advance the debate on these high-stakes responses, the 2019 summer 
school will bring together an international group of leading experts with 
graduate students and junior researchers, to facilitate intensive, 
collaborative explorations of the societal, political, governance, and ethical 
implications of geoengineering responses.

The focus of the summer school will primarily be on the societal and governance 
challenges posed by geoengineering, both near-term challenges related to 
research, development, and capacity-building, and longer-term, more speculative 
challenges related to potential future operational use and consequences. The 
topics addressed by the 2019 summer school will include the societal and 
governance challenges posed by both solar geoengineering and negative emissions 
technologies, including their current and potential interactions - with each 
other, and with the primary climate-change responses of mitigation and 
adaptation.

Following a set of focused briefings to introduce key concepts and 
controversies, the summer school will be organized around collectively 
generated discussion sessions and working groups that aim to advance 
understanding and explore concrete assessment and governance approaches. The 
summer school's working groups will aim to seed continuing collaborations to 
advance research, assessment, and policy development to inform how society can 
responsibly shape these technologies' research, development, and - if 
appropriate - use, to contribute to effective management of climate change.

The Summer School invites applications from graduate students and early-career 
researchers with interests in the social and governance issues posed by climate 
engineering, working in any relevant field. The Summer School is also suitable 
for NGO, government, or other professionals working in related areas who seek 
an intensive experience to develop expertise in geoengineering governance.  The 
Summer School aims to bring new voices and perspectives into geoengineering 
debates, particularly from developing countries. Consequently, while prior 
experience working on issues related to geoengineering is preferable, it is not 
required. In view of the intensely collaborative nature of the Summer School, 
strong English-language communication skills are essential.

The summer school's registration fee of USD $300 will include double-occupancy 
lodging and meals at the Banff Centre throughout the summer school. Some 
single-occupancy occupancy will be available for an additional cost. 
Participants will be responsible for their own travel. Some scholarship funds 
will be available for participants who would not otherwise be able to attend.

Application instructions are now posted, at: 
https://law.ucla.edu/CEGOVsummerschool, with an application deadline of April 
30. Applicants will informed of decisions by May 15, in order to allow time to 
obtain Canadian visas for participants from nations that require them.

For further information or inquires about the summer school, please send an 
email to: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>, with 
subject-line "Inquiry re summer school."

Jesse Reynolds
Emmett / Frankel Fellow in Environmental Law and Policy
Emmett Institute on Climate Change and the Environment
University of California, Los Angeles School of Law
385 Charles E. Young Drive East
1242 Law Building
Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA

Associate Researcher, Utrecht Centre for Water, Oceans and Sustainability Law, 
Utrecht University
Research Affiliate, Harvard's Solar Geoengineering Research Program, Harvard 
University

NL Mobile +31 6 8357 8792
CA Mobile +1 310 954 7716
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
law.ucla.edu/faculty/faculty-profiles/jesse-reynolds/<https://law.ucla.edu/faculty/faculty-profiles/jesse-reynolds/>
legal-planet.org/contributor/jreynolds/<http://legal-planet.org/contributor/jreynolds/>
twitter.com/JesseLReynolds<https://twitter.com/JesseLReynolds>
jreynolds.org<http://jreynolds.org/>
My book The Governance of Solar Geoengineering: Managing Climate Change in the 
Anthropocene<http://jreynolds.org/book/> will be published by Cambridge 
University Press in summer 2019.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"gep-ed" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to