Can Scientists (Not) Be Activists?

April 14, 2017 (Friday) / 5:00 pm6:30 pm

Rainey Auditorium, Penn Museum, 3260 South Street

Can Scientists (Not) Be Activists?

Conference Keynote

James Hansen

Director, Program on Climate Science, Awareness and Solutions, Earth Institute, Columbia University

Presented by Penn Humanities Forum and Penn Program in the Environmental Humanities; cosponsored by Penn Green Campus Partnership.

This lecture draws attention to the ways that scientific research does or does not translate into ethical or political imperatives, drawing from Dr. Hansen’s controversial decision to leave his post as the head of NASA’s Goddard Institute to devote his time to political activism. He talks about the process of science and independent peer review in the context of rapid global climate change.


James Hansen's February 15, 2017 Climate Science, Awareness, and Solutions Program (CSAS) blog post: Fossil fuel emissions, biochar, and Sophie's lawsuit: Sophie Sez #1.

Four years ago this April, James E. Hansen at age 72 retired from NASA after a 46-year career at the space agency's Goddard Institute for Space Sciences. The reason? To more fully devote himself to climate activism. "You can't testify against the government" if you work for them, said Hansen in this April 2013 New York Times article. "At my age, I am not worried about having an arrest record."

After retiring from NASA as Goddard's director, Dr. Hansen joined Columbia University's Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, where he heads the Climate Science, Awareness and Solutions Program. He was trained in physics and astronomy in the space science program of Dr. James Van Allen at the University of Iowa. His early research on the clouds of Venus helped identify their composition as sulfuric acid. Since the late 1970s, he has focused his research on Earth's climate, especially human-made climate change.

Today, Dr. Hansen is best known for his testimony on climate change to congressional committees in the 1980s, which helped raise broad awareness of global warming. He has been recognized with many major honors. These include election to the National Academy of Sciences in 1995, and the Heinz Award for environment and the American Geophysical Union's Roger Revelle Medal in 2001. In 2006, he received the World Wildlife Federation’s Conservation Medal from the Duke of Edinburgh and was designated by Time Magazine as one of the world’s 100 most influential people.

In 2007 Dr. Hansen won the Dan David Prize in the field of Quest for Energy, the Leo Szilard Award of the American Physical Society for Use of Physics for the Benefit of Society, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science Award for Scientific Freedom and Responsibility. (That same year, Mark Bowen's book, Censoring Science: Inside the Political Attack on Dr. James Hansen and the Truth of Global Warming was published.) In 2008, Hansen won the Common Wealth Award for Distinguished Service in Science and was also awarded both the Ohio State University’s Bownocker Medal and the Desert Research Institute’s Nevada Medal. In 2009, Dr. Hansen received the American Meteorological Society’s Carl-Gustaf Rossby Research Medal. In 2010 he received the Sophie Prize and the Blue Planet Prize.


CONFERENCE  13–15 April 2017, University of Pennsylvania
An Ecotopian Toolkit for the Anthropocene
Presented by Penn Program in the Environmental Humanities; cosponsored by Penn Humanities Forum, Institute of Contemporary Art, Kislak Center of Penn Libraries, and Bartram’s Garden.

Keynote Speakers: Rebecca Solnit (April 13) and James Hansen (April 14)

Tool making is a signature trait of the human species. What tools will we make, and require, in the age of the human, the anthropocene: the proposed name for the present geological epoch when humans are the most potent force shaping earth’s systems? Global warming and other anthropocene challenges, including the ongoing sixth mass extinction event, often lead to apocalyptic visions, or apathy. Prompted in part by the 500th anniversary of Thomas More’s Utopia, a classic work whose concerns continue to translate across time and space, we explore a longer history of the anthropocene to help represent—and respond to—our contemporary moment. Might a utopian turn help us navigate warmer, rising waters and build new forms of refuge? What tools can STEAM educators in universities and museums design and develop via the history of utopia and its hope for better futures? Conference program.