Year: 2014

  • What does climate sensitivity mean? Peace for our time…or the wrong battle?

    What does climate sensitivity mean? Peace for our time…or the wrong battle?

    A very quick post on this week’s big news in the climate blogosphere: a new report on climate sensitivity, Oversensitive, written by Nicholas Lewis and Marcel Crok published by the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF). The GWPF’s role is discussed in a new Klimazwiebel post by my colleague, Reiner Grundmann, while Ed Hawkins’s Climate Lab Book…

  • Making weather personal

    Making weather personal

    I was idly reading The Observer on Sunday (2 March, 2014), when I happened to glance at an article about the Scottish island of Lewis and Harris in the Outer Hebrides. I read: “The past few months, too, have shown how vulnerable an island community is when the weather becomes truculent”. Truculent I thought; that’s…

  • Making Responsible Innovation Matter: From Research Projects to Public Policies

    Making Responsible Innovation Matter: From Research Projects to Public Policies

    Writing in this blog, my colleague, Brigitte Nerlich, suggests that the agenda of responsible innovation is becoming an unstoppable juggernaut in the world of research policy and funding. She asks that we take pause to scrutinize and reflect more on this agenda. So, just what is responsible innovation? Is it the latest tick-boxing exercise that…

  • Working across science cultures: A student’s experience

    Working across science cultures: A student’s experience

    This guest post is the outcome of a twitter conversation between Brigitte and Stephanie Ashenden. It’s great to have a student guest-post on this blog! Attending my first ever lecture back in my first year of university was without a doubt, one of the biggest eye openers to the competitive nature of the job market.…

  • Amelia Sharman audio & Prezi: Mapping the climate sceptical blogosphere

    Amelia Sharman audio & Prezi: Mapping the climate sceptical blogosphere

    Amelia Sharman gave a seminar last week ‘Mapping the Climate Sceptical Blogosphere’ to the Institute for Science and Society, as part of Making Science Public’s month of climate change lectures. Amelia discussed her methods for determining which blogs were most central to those amongst what can (loosely) be called a climate sceptic community, and the…

  • Mike Hulme: Public Life of Climate Change, The First 25 Years

    Mike Hulme: Public Life of Climate Change, The First 25 Years

    Mike Hulme, one of Making Science Public’s Honorary Associates, joined us in Nottingham today for a workshop about the role of scientific expertise and consensus in public life. Mike also gave a public lecture at lunchtime, which attracted a multidisciplinary audience from within the university, as well as members of the public from beyond the…

  • Global warming is dead, long live global heating?

    Global warming is dead, long live global heating?

    This post emerged from a weekend conversation between Mike Hulme, Brigitte Nerlich and Warren Pearce. It is also available as a pdf. There has been a lot of talk recently about a so-called ‘pause’ or ‘hiatus’ in global warming. Some argue that it poses a serious challenge to established climate science and may undermine its…