Earth in crisis: environmental policy in an international context - for iPad/Mac/PC
Share:

Listens: 15

About

This innovative album introduces one of the biggest, and most complex, of today’s environmental problems – climate change. It features the hard-hitting, "Who Will Pay", selected as a finalist in an international film competition on "Vulnerability Exposed: The Social Dimensions of Climate Change" organised by the World Bank. This 'Earth in Crisis' album offer a sophisticated understanding of the processes and players that shape contemporary international environmental problems, evaluates what can and should be done in the future, and explores how responses to these dilemmas are intertwined with issues of development, international justice and responsibility. The eleven video tracks focus on climate change induced flooding in the delta regions of Bangladesh and in the Thames region of the UK. In the first five audio tracks, members of The Open University course team explore the main issues raised in the videos. The final three audio tracks explore some of the wider political and scientific dimensions of climate change. This material forms part of The Open University course DU311, Earth in crisis: environmental policy in an international context.

Climate Change in Bangladesh

Extreme weather events are getting worse. Forecasters predict that Bangladesh will be severely affected by floods, cyclones, droughts and the rising s...
Show notes

Adapting to Salinity

Villagers in the vulnerable regions of south Bangladesh reflect on the changes in their environment and describe their struggle to survive.
Show notes

Defence from Cyclones

Redesigning traditional homes. Local tradesmen in Bangladesh are trained to build storm-resistant structures.
Show notes

Who is to Blame?

Should industrialist countries pay for the devastation and suffering occurring in Bangladesh, where millions of people stand to lose their birthplace ...
Show notes

Rising Sea Levels

The results of a two year project to calculate what climate change is doing to the Thames Estuary.
Show notes

The Thames Barrier

The history of flooding in the region and the threat of future surges that overwhelm our current defences.
Show notes

The Isle of Sheppey

The Environment Agency's attitude towards shoreline management and the devastating consequences for locals.
Show notes