Fudan-Arab Lecture Series No.13
复旦-Arab讲座系列第13期
Title/题目:
Climate Impact: A Comparative Governance Framework for Learning Among Countries
气候影响:国家间学习的比较治理结构
Speaker/主讲人:
Prof. Dan Guttman, Fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration, Adjunct Professor at IGPP Fudan University
Dan Guttman教授 美国公共行政科学院院士、复旦全球院兼职教授
Host/主持人:
Prof. Yijia Jing, IGPP, Fudan University
敬乂嘉教授 复旦大学全球公共政策研究院
Time/时间:
21:00-22:20 (Beijing Time), April 23rd
北京时间4月23日21:00-22:20
Venue/地点:
Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87037731656?pwd=QThQMmkreTlRd2lDd1JRcFVhT1JrUT09
Meeting ID: 870 3773 1656
Passcode: 388555
Please click the link to sign up
请点击链接报名
主讲人介绍/ The Speaker:
Dan Guttman is a teacher and lawyer and has been a public servant. He served as Executive Director of a Presidential bioethics Commission, the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission, and directed Senate investigations of US government energy and environmental management. Following years of teaching at Johns Hopkins University in the US and 2004-6 years as China Fulbright scholar, he has taught and worked at US and China universities, developing comparative governance courses and programs-with an ongoing project focused on learning from country adaptation to climate change impacts. He is a Fellow of the US National Academy of Public Administration, cochairing the International Affairs Panel, and was graduated from Yale Law School.
讲座内容/ Abstract:
2023 COP 28 proceedings make clear that challenges of adapting to climate impacts are now a priority comparable to focus on mitigation. Floods, wildfires, drought and heat are causing great damage in locale which, on paper, were prepared. Mitigation actions, such as reducing fossil fuel use/increasing renewables, greening buildings, fit within the missions of traditional government organization. Greenhouse gas reductions in one country will have global effect. Adaptation, by contrast, is locally focused, requiring levels of data and analysis not now available and consideration of complex interactions among many human and natural systems. In 2021 scholars and practitioners from Australia, China and the US undertook to study how the countries are meeting climate impacts, and to see what can be learned from comparing governance efforts. This talk will summarize the initial report, and next steps.