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The 11th T3 Earth Forum

“T3 Earth Forum” is an open forum on cognitive transformation, behavioral transformation, social transformation, and the Earth-human system. Under the limits of the global environment due to expanding human activities and the chain of events that may exceed those limits, how can humanity make a sustainable society? Furthermore, at the core of this question lies the fundamental query: How humans live? This forum will explore interconnections between changes of global environment and cognitive transformation, behavioral transformation, and social transformation in human and society. We will discuss the relationship between the beliefs and values that individuals hold internally, the actions and habits that manifest externally, and the norms, institutions, and systems that emerge when these are shared within society, all in relation to the Earth's environment, through dialogue with experts from various fields.

Date and Time 1:30~2:45pm Nov 4th, 2025 (JST)
Venue Incubation Room 2,Research Institute for Humanity and Nature(RIHN), and online
No prior registration required. However, non-staff members wishing to attend in person need to contact us.
Program 1:30~2:15 pm   Dr. Oscar Hartman Davies
(A postdoctoral researcher at the Centre of Excellence for Anthropocene
History at the KTH Division of History of Science, Technology and Environment)
Title
“Anthropocene History and the governance of flows between ecological science,management, and activism”

Description:
This presentation introduces ongoing research, by myself and others, at the Centre for Anthropocene History at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden. The presentation consists of two parts.
First, I introduce the Centre for Anthropocene History and discuss the key concerns of this emerging interdisciplinary field seeking integrated perspectives on human and earth history through dialogue across the humanities and social and natural sciences. In the second, I share ongoing work from my postdoctoral project and doctoral research, which explores the Anthropocene through the lens of the governance of flows and mobilities. Empirical examples include entanglements between wastewater infrastructures and river health in Britain, the development of landscape connectivity models for conservation and land use planning, and the use of animals as ‘ecosystem sentinels’ for sensing large-scale environmental changes.

2:15~2:45 pm   Q/A and Discussion
Organizer
Co-creation of the Earth-human System Program
Contact Co-creation of the Earth-human System Program
Research Institute for Humanity and Nature
e-mail: earth-human.rihn[a]chikyu.ac.jp (Please replace [a] with @)

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