*Call For Abstracts - Climate Futures Initiative Online Workshop 2020 *

*Theme*:
*Bridging gaps of affluence, nation and time *

*More details*: Climate change has been called a “perfect moral storm”*
meaning a challenge that involves collective action problems across country
borders, with costs and benefits spread over many generations. This
workshop explores and evaluates how institutions, policies and technologies
might allow us to deal justly and effectively with climate change;
considering the way its causes and effects involve people from very
different material, generational, and national circumstances. (*The term
was coined by Steven Gardiner.)

The workshop will be hosted by Princeton's Climate Future's Initiative (link
<https://scholar.princeton.edu/cfi/home>), *online* and *asynchronous*.
Twelve authors will provide works-in-progress (WIPs) to registered
participants, including several special invited guests. These WIPs can take
the form of a 15-20 minute video, a 3000-4000 word document, or both.

*Abstracts due:* *June 12, 2020*
Successful applicants notified: June 23
Works due: August 7,
Works accessible for comment from registered participants: August 10-24

*Criteria for selection*: fit with the topic, original contribution,
interdisciplinary promise, and balance among papers.

Send blinded (400-700 word) abstracts to [email protected] with the
subject line “CFI workshop abstract” by June 12.

Send any questions to Ewan Kingston: [email protected]

To express interest in attending the workshop, add your email here: (link)
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe1bizurAvcVEPsAkjJm8poeg8w3muiQFzlr-J7-m3DsYRRgQ/viewform?usp=sf_link>

*Potential questions* the workshop could cover include, but are not limited
to:

* How should decarbonization strategies in one country try to take into
account the potential synergies with decarbonization strategies in other
countries
* By what institutional mechanisms should the interests of future people be
considered in current decision-making on climate change?
* Should challenges of pervasive inequality and climate change be dealt
with separately or in tandem?
* What is the appropriate role for market mechanisms to play in mitigating
climate change internationally?
* Are “bargains” between a country's younger and older generations on
climate change feasible and justified?
* How should we include the risks of human extinction when weighing climate
change policies?
* Should countries' Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) be formally
compared in terms of global justice? If so, how?
* What does the SARS-Cov2 pandemic mean for collective global responses to
climate change?
* To what extent should global cooperation on climate change be understood
against the backdrop of the injustices of colonialism?
* What role should the UNFCCC play in marshaling responses to climate
change in the decades to come?
* What specific duties do fossil fuel extraction companies have to act on
climate change*?*


*We look forward to receiving your abstracts! *

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