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Climate Collision: What Comes After Copenhagen?

From: A World of Possibilities
Length: 00:55:03

The Copenhagen climate summit saw fierce jockeying for advantage among the great powers but few tangible results. Read the full description.
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Piece Description

The Copenhagen climate summit saw fierce jockeying for advantage among the great powers but few tangible results. Smaller nations and indigenous peoples were left out in the cold. Yet for them it’s not a matter of power politics. They face the power of nature thrown out of balance by heedless human activity. Seas and temperatures continue to rise, disrupting their ancestral livelihoods. In this program, native peoples from the Arctic and the Amazon to Pacific islands under siege by rising waters testify to what’s happening to them and will likely happen to many others in the decades ahead. Their responses to these changes offer much-needed guidance about how to develop the resilience and inventiveness that are essential to our long-term survival. We also hear from climate activists, including well-known representatives of indigenous peoples, about what can be done to build momentum for essential transformation outside the UN process in the wake of stalled international negotiations.

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Additional Credits

Guests:
Cletus Springer, Director, Department of Sustainable Development, Organization of American States
Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, Chair, UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues; Executive Director
Tebtebba Convenor, Asia Indigenous Women’s Network
Claire Greensfelder, Deputy Director, International Forum on Globalization
Voices from “Conversations with the Earth” Project from indigenous communities around the world most affected by climate change

Host: Mark Sommer
Senior Producer: Gregg McVicar
Associate Producers: Naihma Deady, Matt Fidler
Production Engineer: Michael Schwartz
Field Engineer: Sarah Elzas

This Program was funded by The Christensen Fund.

Related Website

http://aworldofpossibilities.org/program/climate-collision-what-comes-after-copenhagen