Not only is the climate changing, but so is global climate governance. Climate policy initiatives have proliferated within and beyond the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (...
The Potsdam Nobel Laureates Symposium “Global Sustainability – A Nobel Cause” brought together internationally renowned scientists and decision-makers under the patronage of German Chancellor Dr. Angela Merkel in 2007. The symposium produced the highly regarded Potsdam Memorandum, which calls for a joint effort to utilize “all sources of innovation and invention” to meet the challenges of the 21st century. Specifically, it identifies the need for a new “global contract” to bring together relevant knowledge from inside and outside the scientific community, in order to meet the challenges of increasing sustainability in the age of the Anthropocene.
From this starting point, representatives of the German Science Alliance developed a concept for a novel research institute in 2008, from which the “Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies” (IASS) emerged. The IASS was officially founded in 2009 as a joint initiative of the German Federal Government, the State of Brandenburg and the research organizations of the German Science Alliance. Potsdam was chosen as the location for the institute due to its excellent research landscape with world class research institutions such as the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) and the Helmholtz Centre Potsdam - GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, as well as its close proximity to politics, media and non-governmental organisations in Berlin.
In its research, the IASS aims to merge all relevant types of knowledge – both within and outside science – in order to jointly find suitable solutions that help us initiate, support, and scientifically accompany the transformation to sustainable development. In accordance with its mission, the IASS involves a wide range of stakeholders from all parts of society in a transdisciplinary process, with the goal of scientifically producing solutions; these stakeholders are not viewed as mere addressees of the Institute's findings at the end of the research process. Our transdisciplinary research processes are based on excellent disciplinary and interdisciplinary research and allow new issues to be developed and comprehensively addressed for such research. The IASS does not merely work to create knowledge needed for action; it also applies its findings in dialogues with politicians, researchers, and civil society and in turn employs these consulting services to promote the further transformation process.
Not only is the climate changing, but so is global climate governance. Climate policy initiatives have proliferated within and beyond the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (...
Program for an official UNFCCC COP25 side event organized by IASS, Nigeria, Environment Defense Fund and the CCAC. The event showcases activities of national and nongovernmental actors that...
This policy brief presents recommendations for action on black carbon, an air pollutant and climate forcer, in the European context. Given the current emissions profile in Europe, targeting the...
This policy brief presents recommendations for action on black carbon, an air pollutant and climate forcer, in the European context.
Given the current emissions profile in Europe,...
This document presents results from the Climate & Clean Air Coalition’s Bricks Initiative reported between July 2016 and June 2017. These results were recorded using the Demonstrating...
A global agreement regulating transboundary air pollution does not currently exist, and the recently adopted United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development lacks a stand-alone goal on air...
The universal 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, adopted in September 2015 by the United Nations General Assembly, offers an important opportunity to tackle air pollution at a global scale....
Air quality and climate change are inexorably linked from their emission sources to their impacts on climate, human health, and ecosystems, including agriculture. However, in global environmental...
Because of its high energy content, natural gas (i.e methane) has been often endorses as a possible "bridging" fuel toward a low-carbon economy.However, it is a highly potent greenhouse...
A summary of the outputs and outcomes of the UNEA 2 Side event: Detoxify: Mitigating Black Carbon and other Pollutants from Brick Production. The event was organized by CCAC partner, the Institute...