Research Units
Research Units
Newcastle University (NCL)
Enough, for all, forever
Newcastle University Anthropocene Research Group aims to analyse and design sustainable transdisciplinary responses to intensifying global change. We seek to achieve this through what we consider the 'Newcastle Approach', an interactive approach to the study of the Anthropocene which aims to expand Anthropocene Research to the arts and humanities.
The University of Leicester (UOL)
The University of Leicester believes exploring the Anthropocene phenomenon is a matter not just for science. Participation by the social sciences and humanities is critical not only to analyse the causes of changes - that strongly reflect evolving socioeconomic patterns - but also to take meaningful actions to mitigate harmful trends. As the Anthropocene state of the planet intensifies, sparking wider political and economic issues, public debate is ever more crucial.
The University of Exeter (UOE)
The University of Exeter too shares our goal of expanding the Anthropocene to the social sciences and humanities.
Indiana University Bloomington (IUB)
Indiana University Bloomington (IUPU) contributes to our international, transdisciplinary, collaborative network of scholars in the sciences, social sciences, humanities, and arts; policy makers; community-based practitioners; and artists.
The network provides an infrastructure to pursue theoretical and applied scholarship in dialogue with experts across the disciplines. Affiliated research projects have a strong community-engagement component that ranges from the hyperlocal to the translocal.
- Anthropology of the Anthropocene.
- Rivers of the Anthropocene.
- The Anthropocene Household.
- Voices from the Waterways.
- Museum of the Anthropocene.
Contact jaskelly@iupui.edu for more information or click Learn More
Copenhagen Business School (CBS)
Copenhagen Business School too shares our goal of expanding the Anthropocene to the social sciences and humanities.