<p>This report will be useful to anyone interested in how culture and heritage intersects with climate change policy. It provides an overview of WG4’s HiCLIP project and results of the pilot application by volunteers. It also highlights potential areas for culture and heritage to become more effective in Climate Action policy and planning.HiCLIP’s interdisciplinary methods aim to bridge the current gap in understanding between climate action and cultural resource management. The multidisciplinary research process and practices presented in this report identify some of the cognitive biases at the basis of sectorized planning which may prevent efficient collaborations.</p>
History
School affiliated with
Lincoln School of Humanities and Heritage (Research Outputs)