19.5.12
TEST 27F: Observatorio Reconstrucción [OR] Conference
3.4.12
Adapting to our own mistakes--are you serious?
This is in response to an article published in The Conversation, entitled “We can’t prevent climate change, so what should we do?” (see below), an article that suggests that it is perhaps time to give up on climate change prevention and move towards adaptation.
The article in question makes what I would call crude assumptions, among them is the claim that we have, for the last 30 years, tried to ‘prevent’ climate change, “Prevention is no longer an option”, it asserts. But, before we exchange prevention for adaptation should not we ask whether our governments have seriously worked toward prevention?
If Australia takes no action by 2020 our carbon pollution could be 20 per cent higher than in 2000, not 5 to 25 per cent lower as the Australian Government intends. [1]Symptomatic of the lack of efforts is that many of our politicians (embarrassingly recent) and sections of the public still do not believe that climate change is largely human induced. Surely we can address and analyse how our governments, themselves ‘governed’ by the market, have failed to comply with the minimum demands as set by international agreements in the struggle to curb climate change.
Efforts to prevent climate change have and are still feeble gestures designed to fall short and deaf to the concerns of the community. And, this is the case in the so called developed world that not only bears the highest level of responsibility for CO2 emissions, but that also has the potential and resources to do something about.
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9.1.12
A hospital with an attitude: the new Royal Children Hospital in Melbourne, Australia
I recently visited the new building for Royal Children Hospital in Melbourne, Australia which, as I hope these images capture, manages to successfully create a friendly and stimulating environment for children.
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| Hospital's main façade |
23.11.11
Occupy the streets: highlighting the subversive need for a shared reality of values and demands
Following the latest demonstrations around the
'Occupy the Streets' movement, I will explore some of the ideas and questions
that have emerged in connection with the Occupy Melbourne. For many reasons
that I hope will become apparent as the article unfolds, the following comments
do not refer to the actions that took place in other parts of the world.
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| Poster by Occupy Melbourne, http://occupymelbourne.org/media/posters-flyers |
Copyright © beatriz.maturana 2003-







