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Noel Healy
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Professor Noel Healy (ֱ) and Fergus Green (London School of Economics) organized and facilitated a workshop with leading national and international scholars on the topic of “Anti-fossil fuel politics: Social Activism, Government Policy and International Cooperation”. The worked hosted by the Department of Environmental Science Policy and Management (ESPM) UC, Berkeley included scholars from the University of Michigan, Stanford University, London School of Economics, University of British Columbia, the Centre for International Climate and Environmental Research Oslo (CICERO), the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI), and UC Berkeley (list of speakers below)
Dr. Noel Healy is currently a visiting scholar at the Department of ESPM. His sabbatical work at UC Berkeley involves examining the impacts of fossil fuel resistance movements in confronting carbon lock-in, (2) socio-environmental impacts of unconventional natural gas extraction and open-pit coal mining, and (3) transitional justice and “just transition” actions for fossil-fuel-rich third-world countries.
Workshop Programme: Anti-Fossil Fuel Politics
Introduction: "Ending the Fossil Fuel Era?"
Key lessons, insights, and strategies from “”
- (University of Michigan)
Panel 1: Social activism (and its opposition)
- Disrupting carbon lock-in: The catalytic impact of the fossil fuel divestment movement
(ֱ)
- Big oil and global warming: Early knowledge, the denial machine, and the corruption of economics
(Stanford University)
- No Coal Trains: Opposition to Coal Exports in Canada and the United States
(University of British Columbia)
Panel 2. Government policy
- From oil as welfare to oil as risk? Norwegian petroleum resource governance and climate policy
and (Centre for International Climate and Environmental Research (CICERO), Oslo)
California's supply-side policy plans
(Stockholm Environment Institute)
Panel 3. International cooperation
- Banning Dirty Cars: Political Signaling and Green Technology Competition
(UC, Berkeley)
- Norms and Networks: the international diffusion of anti-fossil fuel policies
(London School of Economics & Political Science)
- Incorporating supply-side climate policies into the UNFCCC process
(Stockholm Environment Institute)