Climate and Culture
#CitiesAreListening Climate and Culture Page
En tant qu'élément central de la session All Town Halls qui s'est déroulée dans le cadre du Séminaire 2022 de CGLU, Climate Heritage Network et les autres organisations leaders ont présenté un titre de l’actualité de demain et une image accompagnant ce titre. L'idée était de nous offrir la possibilité de co-créer dans une perspective audacieuse et futuriste. Pour réussire, après quelques défis initiaux, à qu'en 2042 les propositions et la pensée radicale du Town Hall aient un impact crucial sur le monde d'une manière que nous n'aurions même jamais imaginée !
Earth Expects to hit Net Zero within 5 years Thanks to Huge Cultural Shifts First Initiated in the 2020s
We have tackled the missing cultural dimensions of the climate crisis; societies, especially in industrialised and industrialising countries, have transcended their take-make-waste petrocultures. To get there, cultural actors and cultural voices were instrumental in helping people imagine post-carbon, climate resilient ways of living.
Championing traditional knowledge and intangible heritage that pre-dates (or works independently of) the carbon era -- to point the way to post-carbon living.
Lifting up the worldviews of Indigenous Peoples’ and local communities that were never co-opted by modern extractive economies to offer counterpoints to prevailing views of progress.
Unleashing artistic and imaginative tools to help us challenge inherited assumptions and transformatively reinterpret today’s carbon-scape and mindsets.
Realising this future requires that local governments pursue holistic cultural and environmental policies that leave behind failed nature-culture divisions. It raises the question of whether existing cultural infrastructures can deliver the needed impact at scale and with urgency.
As difficult as it will be to achieve, a world that only achieves Net Zero by the mid-2040s has not escaped great troubles. It is a world of sea walls and planned retreat. For better and for worse, cities, land use and rural areas look today much different. Year-round forest fire seasons, more typhoons. Large-scale displacement, which means migration still roiling the politics of the planet.
We clearly did not “escape” climate change, but catastrophe has been avoided. Today’s youth have been given a chance and intergenerational equity has prevailed. Humanity teetered—and many people paid an unfair and impossible price—but it did not fall. And, in our headline, we have emerged with a new culture, rooted in ancient wisdom, of resilience and regeneration.