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Social science sequestered

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Markusson, N 
Balta-Ozkan, N 
Chilvers, J 
Healey, P 

Abstract

Greenhouse gas removal (GGR) raises many cultural, ethical, legal, social, and political issues, yet in the growing area of GGR research, humanities and social sciences (HASS) research is often marginalized, constrained and depoliticised. This global dynamic is illustrated by an analysis of the UK GGR research programme. This dynamic matters for the knowledge produced and for its users. Without HASS contributions, too narrow a range of perspectives, futures and issues will be considered, undermining or overpromising the prospects for the responsible development of GGR (and threatening worse side-effects), and limiting our understanding of why and how policy demands GGR solutions in the first place. In response, we present policy principles for bringing HASS fully into GGR research, organized around three themes: (1) HASS-led GGR research, (2) Opening up GGR futures, and (3) The politics of GGR futures.

Description

Keywords

humanities and social sciences, GGR research, marginalized, constrained, depoliticised, UK GGR programme, research policy principles

Journal Title

Frontiers in Climate

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2624-9553
2624-9553

Volume Title

2

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA
Sponsorship
We acknowledge funding from the UK GGR programme, under several specific grants: NE/P019838/1, NE/P019900/1, NE/P019951/1, NE/P019668/1, and NE/P01982X/1.