New issue of Daedalus features essays from sixteen climate change witnesses

CAMBRIDGE, MA - September 24, 2020--This week, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the MIT Press published a new issue of Daedalus that features essays by sixteen prominent climate change witnesses, representing multiple fields, backgrounds, and generations. Guest edited by Nancy L. Rosenblum (Harvard University), the volume assembles personal narratives from men and women immersed in the greatest problem of our time, perhaps of all time.

The many and varied dangers of climate change propel scientists, doctors, public health experts, social scientists, lawyers, journalists, business consultants, and military officers to speak out from the vantage point of their specialized knowledge. We call them witnessing professionals. Their personal narratives describe paths into climate-related work, the constraints imposed on them by disciplinary boundaries and by standard codes of professional ethics, and the need to move beyond them.

Witnessing professionals act on the imperative to communicate widely what they know, and reflect on the broader ethical challenges and political demands of addressing decision-makers and the public. They build institutions to extend their work. Climate change shapes their professional identity and expands their sense of responsibility. They push the bounds of their fields and they push themselves as witnessing professionals. The authors describe painful setbacks while balancing on the knife-edge of hope.

Witnessing Climate Change includes the following essays:

"Introduction: Paths to Witnessing, Ethics of Speaking Out" by Nancy L. Rosenblum (Academy Member; Harvard University)

"On Becoming Witnessing Professionals" by Robert Jay Lifton (Academy Member; Columbia University; CUNY)

"What Is the Social Responsibility of Climate Scientists?" by Naomi Oreskes (Academy Member; Harvard University)

"Witnessing for the Middle to Depolarize the Climate Change Conversation" by Robert H. Socolow (Academy Member; Princeton University)

"The Professional Ethics of Witnessing Professionals" by Dennis F. Thompson (Harvard University)

"An Environmental Lawyer's Fraught Quest for Legal Tools to Hold Back the Seas" by Michael B. Gerrard (Columbia University)

"Racism as a Motivator for Climate Justice" by Mark A. Mitchell (George Mason University)

"From Air Pollution to the Climate Crisis: Leaving the Comfort Zone" by Patrick L. Kinney (Boston University)

"Climate in the Boardroom: Struggling to Reconcile Business as Usual & the End of the World as We Know It" by Rebecca Henderson (Academy Member; Harvard University)

"Task Force Climate Change: A Patron Saint of Lost Causes, or Just Ahead of Its Time?" by David W. Titley (U.S. Navy; Penn State University)

"Seeing Is Believing: Understanding & Aiding Human Responses to Global Climate Change" by Elke U. Weber (Academy Member; Princeton University)

"Less Talk, More Walk: Why Climate Change Demands Activism in the Academy" by Jessica F. Green (University of Toronto)

"A Conversation" by Nancy L. Rosenblum (Academy Member; Harvard University) and Rafe Pomerance (Woodwell Climate Research Center)

"The Coral Is Not All Dead Yet" by Carolyn Kormann (The New Yorker)

"Slow Disaster in the Anthropocene: A Historian Witnesses Climate Change on the Korean Peninsula" by Scott Gabriel Knowles (Drexel University)

"Let Me Tell You a Story" by Antonio Oposa Jr. (Lawyer, SEA Camp)

Credit: 
The MIT Press