Apply Today! Science Justice Summer School

Update | February 22, 2024: The application deadline has been extended to Monday, March 11.

Update | February 15, 2024: This post has been updated to clarify that only graduate students and postdoctoral researchers from the University of Washington, Seattle University and Seattle Pacific University are eligible to apply for the Science Justice Summer School. We apologize for any confusion. 

Are you a grad student or postdoc at the University of Washington, Seattle University or Seattle Pacific University who is interested in applying climate and environmental justice frameworks in your work? Consider applying to the Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative’s first-ever Science Justice Summer School! This two-week program will dive into a range of justice-related topics through lectures, discussion groups and more. Applications close Monday, March 11 at 11:59 p.m. 

The Science Justice Summer School will run from July 10-24, 2024, on the University of Washington campus in Seattle. The Summer School is open to second-year master’s students, Ph.D. students, recent graduates of master’s or Ph.D. programs (as of Winter or Spring Quarter 2024) and postdoctoral fellows. We welcome students from all disciplines (sciences, social sciences, humanities). The Resilience Collaborative will provide 10-15 stipends of $2,000 to qualified applicants. Students should be living within daily commuting distance of the UW Seattle campus as no housing stipends are available for this year’s program.

APPLY TODAY!


New funding for the Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative supports work in flooding, wildfire smoke

The Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative is starting two exciting new projects this year that will support adaptation to flooding and wildfire smoke, thanks to funding from NOAA and the Department of Commerce. These projects are: 

Stories as science: Integrating lived experience and community knowledge into actionable adaptation science in Pacific Northwest and Pacific Islands regions. This project brings together researchers and storytellers from the Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative, the Pacific Research on Island Solutions for Adaptation program and Tikkun Olam Productions. A recent story from the Resilience Collaborative highlights how this project aims to elevate the experiences of frontline communities while testing the oral history process as a novel method for co-producing science and guiding adaptation.

Understanding the role of social infrastructure in extreme heat and wildfire smoke vulnerability mitigation: A regional comparison in the West and Pacific Northwest regions. This project brings together researchers from the Desert Research Institute and the Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative.

Both projects are supported by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which is awarding $3.9 million over four years to existing NOAA Climate Adaptation Partnerships teams (formerly known as Regional Integrated Sciences and Assessments). The eight projects receiving this funding will test, scale up and transfer knowledge to build national adaptation to floods and wildfires across eight different projects.


NCRC and partners to pilot groundbreaking co-production method

Building resilience to climate change requires many diverse areas of expertise, experiences and knowledge. Though they have historically been marginalized from climate preparedness efforts, people of color, Indigenous peoples, people with lower incomes and people whose lives depend on natural resources — known collectively as “frontline communities” — have innovative solutions for building resilience to climate change impacts. 

The Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative and partners are piloting a groundbreaking method for elevating first-hand experiences and visions of climate resilience and solutions, with the goal of incorporating community knowledge into efforts to prepare for climate impacts. Partnering with the documentary storytelling organization Tikkun Olam Productions and the Pacific Research on Island Solutions for Adaptation program, a trans-disciplinary research team will record the oral histories of frontline communities facing flooding and other climate change impacts. Oral history is a method of documenting first-hand experiences, memories and reflections through in-depth conversation and deep listening. The team will incorporate these stories into climate adaptation efforts, testing the oral history process as a novel method for co-producing science and guiding adaptation. The project is funded by a grant from the NOAA Climate Program Office. 

Dr. Rishi Sugla, a lead scientist at the Climate Impacts Group, is drawing on his expertise in community organizing, documentary filmmaking and the natural sciences to lead this project. “Storytelling approaches, like oral histories and documentary film, provide rich context that can inform place-based and community-led solutions to the most pressing problems facing frontline communities” he says. “This work is about creating just climate futures that center the knowledge and experiences of communities first and foremost. At the same time, we want to make sure we are co-generating resources that build capacity and power in our community partners along the way, through storytelling work oriented around our partner’s expressed needs. We are excited that NOAA sees the potential of multimedia storytelling as part of a climate justice focused adaptation practice. ” 

Over the course of three years, the project team will work with Indigenous communities in Washington and Hawai’i that are at increased risk of flooding due to various social, economic and political stressors. The team of researchers and storytellers will hold community sessions to co-create a production guide, facilitate 10 community members’ oral histories, edit the oral histories to highlight collective narratives and work with researchers to analyze the oral histories for relevant data for adaptation projects. The project is “an innovative and human-centered approach to accelerating climate adaptation,”  Dr. Victoria Keener, co-lead principal investigator from the Pacific Research on Islands Solutions for Adaptation Program, says. “We need more than data to communicate the impacts of climate change in frontline communities, and the strong history of storytelling in the Pacific Islands can help inform and implement needed changes,” she says. Dr. Keener and Dr. Guillaume Mauger of the Climate Impacts Group are co-Principal Investigators on the project. Maggie Lemere and Marielle Olentine, both of Tikkun Olam Productions, will lead filming and production of the oral histories and support the creation of community design sessions. 

Marielle Olentine, a storyteller and producer at Tikkun Olam, describes the production company as “a team of regenerative storytelling practitioners.” “Our team believes in the power of collective narratives to inform and reinforce the resilience of communities on the frontlines of climate change. This work centers and amplifies the legitimacy and value of the lived experiences of those that have been inhabiting these landscapes for generations,” she says. “Inviting living experts into the design process through community design sessions is a core part of what makes this research context-specific and will ideally allow these oral histories to interweave with scientific approaches to disaster response and climate adaptation in a way that promotes community autonomy and buy-in. We’re grateful to those who are already doing this work and look forward to growing the depth of knowledge in this area through NOAA’s support.” 

The trans-disciplinary team will start developing the project this fall, and plan to hold their first community meeting in Washington early this spring.  


Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative releases second annual report

The Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative is pleased to share the results of our last year of work advancing the climate resilience priorities of frontline communities! 

A few highlights from the report include: 

  • Partnering with Oregon Rural Action. Our Rural Resilience Portfolio is partnering with Oregon Rural Action to support their coordination and editorial input on research products and their efforts to connect our researchers with the community.
  • Conducting Tribal Listening Sessions in Oregon and Washington. Our Tribal Coastal Resilience Portfolio has conducted five listening sessions with a total of 33 participants, representing 20 Northwest coastal Tribes.
  • Developing a Climate Justice summer program. Our Scaling Resilience Portfolio is designing a summer school program focused on climate and environmental justice and co-production. This four-to-five week program will invite early career researchers from diverse academic backgrounds to meet in person and learn about the theory and practice of climate justice.

Read the Northwest Resilience Collaborative report to learn more. Learn more about the Collaborative’s structure and mission on the Collaborative webpage