The Future That Grows on Trees - Studying the social life of climate change mitigation through forests

Lead Research Organisation: London School of Economics and Political Science
Department Name: Sociology

Abstract

Due to growing global energy demand and consumption, emission reduction alone will be insufficient for reaching the 1.5-degree objective. Additional greenhouse gas removal measures - either through technological innovation or natural carbon sinks - are increasingly popular forms of climate action. Amongst those, forests as socio-technical ecologies take a prominent position due to their natural ability to bind carbon in their biomass. As the marketization of carbon sequestration has been criticized for causing more emissions than avoiding them, my project proposal suggests looking at other speculative practices with trees. Connecting anthropological literature on speculation to Science and Technology studies research on alternative ways in which humans and the environment engage with each other, my project is guided by the question of how forests participate in transforming the relationship between nature and culture, and asks: What are the social and political implications for constructing the future through trees? Applying a multi-sited ethnographic approach, I will study how boundaries between nature and culture are renegotiated through biomass-based greenhouse gas removal techniques, and contribute with this project to the social study of climate change.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
ES/P000622/1 01/10/2017 30/09/2027
2751282 Studentship ES/P000622/1 26/09/2022 30/12/2025 Jan Gilles