A new generation of climate models, COVID-19 and the Paris Agreement
2020 CONSTRAIN EU @CONSTRAIN_EU ZERO IN REPORT 2 Our second report zeroes in on a new generation of climate models, … Read More
2020 CONSTRAIN EU @CONSTRAIN_EU ZERO IN REPORT 2 Our second report zeroes in on a new generation of climate models, … Read More
7th October 2020 Danny Dorling The Conversation @_TCglobal In 1968, at the height of the last great influenza pandemic, at … Read More
24th June 2020 Andrea Saltelli, Gabriele Bammer, Isabelle Bruno, Erica Charters, Monica Di Fiore, et al Nature @nature The COVID-19 … Read More
17th July 2020 George Parker, Clive Cookson, Sarah Neville, Sebastian Payne, Camilla Hodgson, Anna Gross and Laura Hughes The Financial Times … Read More
20th July 2020 David D. Kirkpatrick, Matt Apuzzo and Selam Gebrekidan The New York Times @nytimes The coronavirus exposed European countries’ … Read More
24th June 2020 Andrea Saltelli et al Nature @nature Pandemic politics highlight how predictions need to be transparent and humble … Read More
19th June 2020 Kristoffer B. Berse University of the Philippines Kris is an Associate Professor at the University of the … Read More
8th June 2020 Seth Flaxman et al in Nature Abstract Following the emergence of a novel coronavirus1 (SARS-CoV-2) and its spread … Read More
4th June 2020 Melissa Davey The Guardian The Guardian: COVID-19 INVESTIGATIONS A vast database from a little-known company called Surgisphere … Read More
INGSA/Koi Tū EXCLUSIVE The science we need for good public policy is by necessity a transdisciplinary science. In countries such as Germany, natural scientists were joined from the outset in dealing with the pandemic by experts from social sciences and even normative disciplines like philosophical ethics. This transparent inclusivity of a range of perspectives was not, however, universal.