Tag: Daniel Schrag

  • Science & Tech

    Oliver Stone wants you to reconsider nuclear power

    In a Harvard talk following a preview of his new documentary, the director debates nuclear energy’s merits as a climate change solution.

    3–5 minutes
    Joshua Goldstein and Oliver Stone.
  • Science & Tech

    A global beacon on climate change

    Salata Institute for Climate and Sustainability casts off with University-wide, interdisciplinary approach to begin finding real solutions to existential crisis .

    5–7 minutes
    Salata Institute Panel.
  • Campus & Community

    Puncturing myth of purity of science, technology

    Harvard Kennedy School Professor Sheila Jasanoff, winner of the 2022 Holberg Prize, reflects on the long road she’s traveled to develop the field of science and technology studies.

    4–6 minutes
    Sheila Jasanoff.
  • Science & Tech

    Finding a way forward on climate change

    If the causes and problems of climate change are entwined, then the solutions must be as well, according to an online panel of Harvard faculty.

    4–6 minutes
    Panel on Zoom for climate change talk.
  • Nation & World

    And now, the way forward

    Harvard faculty members reflect on the inauguration of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris and the challenges that await them in the months ahead.

    20–30 minutes
    Joe Biden signs his first executive orders in the Oval Office.
  • Nation & World

    So how much change can Biden bring on climate change?

    Harvard environmental experts discuss what’s next in climate-change policy.

    7–10 minutes
    Solar panels.
  • Campus & Community

    Two online classes aim to bridge all Harvard students, Schools

    Professors Michael Sandel and Daniel Schrag are inviting all Harvard degree students to join in two University-wide courses this fall designed to spark conversation and mutual learning across the campuses.

    9–14 minutes
    Michael Sandel and Dan Schrag
  • Science & Tech

    Solve ocean’s troubles and climate change too?

    Experts from Harvard and beyond gathered Monday to discuss the oceans’ plight in a warming world, offering hopeful solutions despite the often bleak assessment prompted by warming, pollution, acidification, and coral bleaching.

    4–5 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Public lands ‘a priceless legacy’ for future

    Public lands owned and managed by the federal government are not a land grab, as some activists claim, but rather the result of a practice that goes back to the nation’s founding, a former Interior Department official says.

    6–9 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Five-minute warnings

    The Harvard University Center for the Environment has produced 35 videos in which experts in various fields describe work related to climate change.

    3–5 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Ex-EPA official sees narrow openings for climate progress

    In a Harvard talk, ex-EPA official Robert Perciasepe outlined some narrow openings for bipartisanship on environmental issues.

    2–4 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Targeting the ills of climate change

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry helped launch a new Harvard climate change and global health initiative Thursday, saying that climate change impacts almost always affect human health.

    3–5 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Sick planet, sick people

    Harvard scientists are helping launch a new initiative to foster collaboration among scientists working at the intersection of the environment and health.

    4–5 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    To sample climate concerns, look at nature

    A panel of climate change experts at Harvard said that nature is telling us where we need to make changes to lessen future climate change impact: the places flooded or otherwise damaged in past storms.

    4–7 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Students bring fresh perspective to environmental issues

    Each year the Harvard University Center for the Environment awards funding to students who have an interest in environmental and energy research. The students’ backgrounds vary as widely as their topics.

    4–6 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Innovative faculty research receives support

    Five winners have been named as recipients of this year’s Star Family Challenge for Promising Scientific Research awards. Now in its second year, the challenge is designed to acknowledge and support some of the most innovative research being done by Harvard faculty in the natural and social sciences.

    5–7 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Sizing up climate change

    Experts on energy, the environment, and climate change gathered at Harvard University’s Sanders Theatre Monday to discuss how governments and universities can help meet the challenge.

    5–8 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Let’s talk climate change

    The Harvard University Center for the Environment is sponsoring Climate Week, featuring breakfasts with scientists working on the problems along with a variety of climate-centered activities, from talks by prominent scientists to poetry readings to informal gatherings.

    3–5 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Focus on food

    Twenty-two faculty members presented seven-minute lightning lectures on research and realities involving food.

    6–9 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Plan to toughen emissions rules faces tough fight

    Professors Jody Freeman and Richard Lazarus came together to discuss the legal future of the nation’s most ambitious action on climate change to date.

    3–5 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Studying energy, environment

    Beginning this fall, Harvard undergraduates will be able to select a secondary field of study in energy and environment, which will allow students in an array of concentrations to gain exposure to issues such as climate change.

    4–6 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Working with China on key issues necessary

    Former World Bank President Robert Zoellick advocated engagement with China in areas of agreement as the nation faces its multiple challenges in environment, economy, and energy supply.

    3–4 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Advising on climate change

    In addition to conducting research and teaching about climate, energy, and the environment, Harvard faculty members also serve as expert advisers to policymakers, putting their science to work to improve laws and regulations and to foster understanding between the worlds of government and academics.

    7–11 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Putting the ‘estimate’ back in estimates

    Professor M. Granger Morgan of Carnegie Mellon wants to bring the uncertainty back to forecasting, he said in a Harvard talk.

    3–5 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    In Ireland’s recent history, a model for clean growth

    Clean economic growth is not just a pipe dream — it happened in Ireland between 1990 and 2010, when emissions dropped 10 percent even as the country’s economy grew 265 percent, the leader of that country’s Green Party said in a Harvard talk.

    3–4 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    ‘Chasing Ice,’ and searching for solutions

    A screening of the film “Chasing Ice” brought Harvard experts together to discuss innovations in monitoring the glaciers’ retreat and how America can tap its own energy sources.

    3–5 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Urgent prep work

    Humanitarian relief workers and climate scientists gathered in Cambridge this week to discuss the connection between climate change and humanitarian disasters and what relief workers can learn from science.

    3–5 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Building with an eye on the sky

    Real estate developer Jonathan Rose highlighted recent progress in incorporating green features into affordable housing projects, saying America’s cities provide an energetic counterpoint to the stagnation in Washington, D.C.

    2–4 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Earth feels impact of middle class

    The rise of the middle class is a bigger environmental challenge than the rising global population, according to Sir David King, the former science adviser to the British government, who urged the adoption of sustainable development as a way to manage growing global demands in a finite world.

    3–5 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    A groundswell on climate change

    More vigorous grassroots social action is needed to drive the reforms that could address climate change, panelists said during a discussion at Sanders Theatre.

    4–7 minutes