The popular Science On Screen series returns to Santa Fe Wednesday evening, May 8, with Simon DeDeo and the 1992 cult hacker film Sneakers.
SFI's 2013 Community Lecture series debuted March 14 with UC-Boulder's Leysia Palen describing how victims, observers, and “citizen-responders” are using modern technology to participate in disaster response. Watch ...
Speaking at SFI yesterday, noted climate scientist James Hansen told an overflow crowd that efforts to stem climate change will be ineffectual as long as fossil fuels remain the cheapest ...
SFI's crowdfunding campaign has reached its goal. The resulting research will help scientists preserve the threatened landscapes on which indigenous human groups depend.
The 2012 Science On Screen series in Santa Fe wrapped up December 13 to a full house, with "The Gods Must Be Crazy" and Murray Gell-Mann's distinctive insight and ...
Workshop
October 22, 2013 - October 24, 2013
Noyce Conference Room
A mature science of sustainability, robustly grounded in complex systems theory, is needed to guide the exploitation of Earth’s resources and shift socio-ecological systems toward a more sustainable space for both people and the planet. This workshop will bring together leaders from SFI and the broader research community to consider a framework for systematic inquiry to undergird predictive, hypothesis-driven, empirically testable practice. We will explore the current state of relevant theory and practice in sustainability science at the land/water/energy/climate nexus. It is increasingly recognized that decisions at the smallest spatial and time scales aggregate across dimensions into global long-term trajectories. Yet sustainability challenges are often focused on improving “fast” variables, such as crop yield and water quality, without recognition of slower, underlying dynamics, such as the supporting ecosystem services or shifts in human dimensions. The workshop will explore systematized experimental approaches that build our ability to recognize, describe and intentionally manage slow variables in complex systems that affect humanity’s ability to provision itself sustainably. We will highlight the development and application of open, learning, knowledge systems that better reflect interactions between theory, models, data and information applied within geographically specified cases.
SFI Host: Nina Federoff, Luis Bettencourt, and Molly Jahn