Three Key Questions on Culture, Cultural Heritage and Climate Change

26 1 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Summary for Policymakers, in Id., Climate Change 2022: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability. Contribution of Working Group II to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press, 2022). 2 ICOMOS Climate Change and Cultural Heritage Working Group, The Future of Our Pasts: Engaging Cultural Heritage in Climate Action (Paris: ICOMOS, 2019). 3 S.H. Schwartz, Values: Cultural and Individual, in F.J.R. van de Vijver, A. Chasiotis, and S.M. Breugelmans (eds.), Fundamental Questions in Cross-cultural Psychology (Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press, 2011), 463–493. 4 S. Capstick, et al., Bridging the Gap – the Role of Equitable Low-carbon Lifestyles, in United Nations Environment Programme, The Emissions Gap Report 2018. United Nations Environment Programme, Nairobi. 75, as cited in A. Potts, “The Role of Culture in Climate Resilient Development”, UCLG Committee on Culture Reports, no 10, and Climate Heritage Network (Working Group 5), Barcelona, 5 November 2021. 5 K. Green, et al., Climate Change Needs Behavior Change: Making the Case for Behavioral Solutions to Reduce Global Warming (Arlington, VA: Rare, 2018). 6 Thought the failure of the General Conference of the World Heritage Committee to act on the draft has put a cloud over this accomplishment. 7 ResiliArt x Mondiacult Event, Can Cultural Infrastructures Be Drivers of People-centred Climate Action? A Provocation (Climate Heritage Network, 2022). 8 K. Anderson, et al., “Three Decades of Climate Mitigation: Why Haven’t We Bent the Global Emissions Curve?”, in Annual Review of Environment and Resources 46:1, 2021: 653-689, accessed 20 February 2022. 9 Climate Heritage Network, Empowering People to Imagine and Realise Climate Resilient Futures Through Culture – from Arts to Heritage (CHN, 2022).

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