Hopeful Climate Futures through Speculative Storytelling (Washington, DC)


Event Details


Date and time: Tuesday, June 4, 2024, 12:00-1:30pm Eastern / 9:00-10:30am Arizona

When we think of climate, the stories we tell about the future are bad: megastorms, crop failures, and heat waves loom over us, sending a signal that the problem is so vast, so complex, that it’s out of our control. That narrative is compelling for some, but leaves others feeling helpless and disillusioned. Even the most ardent champions of climate action sometimes focus more on sounding the alarm than on imagining and mapping out what success might look like. Without positive climate futures, visions of climate adaptation and resilience that we can work toward, it’s much harder to motivate broad-based efforts for change in the present. If we hope to design climate policies for a thriving, decarbonized world, we need a collective goal to work towards, not just a catastrophe to avert.

The Climate Action Almanac, published in 2024 by Arizona State University’s Center for Science and the Imagination, presents stories, essays, and art exploring hopeful futures shaped by climate action, grounded in real science and in the complexities of diverse human and physical geographies. The book presents visions of how collective action, aided by scientific insights, culturally responsive technologies, and revolutions in governance and labor, can help us make progress toward sustainable futures. The Almanac’s contributors imagine change building up and out from local contexts—a vibrant, coordinated network, rather than a global decree from on high.

Join Chinelo Onwualu, a celebrated speculative fiction author and editor and the author of the essay “The Case for Reckless Climate Optimism” in the Almanac, for a conversation about how speculative fiction’s visions of the future can frame effective, responsive climate policies. In conversation with Joey Eschrich, coeditor of the Almanac, Chinelo will emphasize the urgency of decolonizing climate action, using this moment of great transition to build new structures and definitions of justice and well-being, rather than merely retooling existing systems that perpetuate inequality.

Lunch will be provided. This event is free and open to everyone, in person or via Zoom.

This event is presented by the Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes at Arizona State University, as part of their New Tools for Science Policy seminar series.