26 research outputs found

    Enabling new mindsets and transformative skills for negotiating and activating climate action: Lessons from UNFCCC conferences of the parties

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    Technological and policy solutions for transitioning to a fossil-free society exist, many countries could afford the transition, and rational arguments for rapid climate action abound. Yet effective action is still lacking. Dominant policy approaches have failed to generate action at anywhere near the rate, scale or depth needed to avoid potentially catastrophic futures. This is despite 30 years of climate negotiations under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), and wide-ranging actions at national, transnational and sub-national levels. Practitioners and scholars are, thus, increasingly arguing that also the root causes of the problem must be addressed – the mindset (or paradigm) out of which the climate emergency has arisen. Against this background, we investigate decision-makers’ views of the need for a different mindset and inner qualities that can support negotiating and activating climate action, along with factors that could enable such a mindset shift. Data were collected during participatory workshops run at the 25th UNFCCC Conference of the Parties (COP25) in 2019, and comprise surveys, as well as social media communication and semi-structured interviews with COP attendees. Our results underline vast agreement among participants regarding the need for a mindset shift that can support new ways of communication and collaboration, based on more relational modes of knowing, being and acting. They also suggest the emergence of such a mindset shift across sectors and contexts, but not yet at the collective and systems levels. Finally, they highlight the importance of transformative skills and the need for experimental, safe spaces. The latter are seen as a visible manifestation and enabler that can support agency for change through shared self-reflection, experience and practice. We present a transformative skills framework, and conclude with further research needs and policy recommendations

    Creating space for reflection and dialogue: Examples of new modes of communication for empowering climate action

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    “The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again but expecting different results.” This quote by Albert Einstein highlights our need for new formats of communication to address the knowledge-action gap regarding climate change and other sustainability challenges. This includes reflection, and communication spaces, as well as methods and approaches that can catalyze the emergence of transformative change and action. In this article we present and reflect on experiments we carried out at international climate negotiations and conferences

    Learning and community building in support of collective action:Toward a new climate of communication at the COP

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    The international UN Climate Change conferences known as “Conferences of the Parties (COPs)” have an enormous convening power and are attended annually by tens of thousands of actors working on climate change topics from a wide range of perspectives. In the COP spaces outside of the formal negotiations, the communication culture is dominated by “side events,” a format that relies heavily on conventional presentations and panels that can be informative, but is generally not conducive to mutual engagement, reflection, or dialogue. There is an urgent need for new dialogue formats that can better foster learning and community-building and thereby harness the enormous latent potential for climate action represented by the diverse stakeholders that gather at the COP. Against this backdrop, and drawing on our experience with the development and implementation of the Co-Creative Reflection and Dialogue Spaces at COP25, COP26, and COP27, we make recommendations for further developing the communication culture of the COPs. At the level of individual sessions, we provide recommendations for designing participatory dialogues that can better support reflection, interconnection, and action orientation. In addition, we offer guidance for scaling up these practices, for instance through networks and communities of practice to support a shift of the overall communication culture of the COPs. Our recommendations focus on interactions and exchanges that unfold outside of the formal negotiation sessions, with a view toward enabling and accelerating transformative action by non-state actors

    Enzymatic transformation and bonding of sulfonamide antibiotics to model humic substances

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    11 páginas.-- 3 figuras.-- 4tablas.-- 55 referencias.-- J. Schwarz, H. Knicker, G. E. Schaumann, and S. Thiele-Bruhn, “Enzymatic Transformation and Bonding of Sulfonamide Antibiotics to Model Humic Substances,” Journal of Chemistry, vol. 2015, Article ID 829708, 11 pages, 2015. doi:10.1155/2015/829708© 2015 J. Schwarz et al. Sulfonamides are consumed as pharmaceutical antibiotics and reach agricultural soils with excreta used as fertilizer. Subsequently, nonextractable residues rapidly form in soil, which has been researched in a couple of studies. To further elucidate conditions, strength, and mechanisms of the fixation to soil humic substances, three selected sulfonamides were investigated using the biochemical oligomerization of substituted phenols as a model for the humification process. Catechol, guaiacol, and vanillin were enzymatically reacted using laccase from Trametes versicolor. In the presence of the substituted phenols alone, the concentration of sulfonamides decreased. This decrease was even more pronounced when additional laccase was present. Upon the enzymatic oligomerization of the substituted phenols to a humic-like structure the sulfonamides were sorbed, transformed, sequestered, and nonextractable bound. Sulfonamides were transformed depending on their molecular properties. Fractions of different bonding strength were determined using a sequential extraction procedure. Isolated nonextractable products were analyzed by chromatographic, spectroscopic, and calorimetric methods to identify coupling and bonding mechanisms of the sulfonamides. Differential scanning calorimetry measurements suggested cross-linking of such incorporated sulfonamides in humic oligomers. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy measurements showed clear differences between the vanillin-sulfapyridine oligomer and the parent sulfapyridine indicating bound residue formation through covalent binding.This project was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFGTh678/4-1 and DFGTh678/4-2).Peer Reviewe

    Amoebapores and NK-lysin, members of a class of structurally distinct antimicrobial and cytolytic peptides from protozoa and mammals: a comparative functional analysis.

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    Amoebapores, the pore-forming polypeptides of the protozoan parasite Entamoeba histolytica, and NK-lysin, an effector molecule of porcine NK (natural killer) and cytotoxic T cells, belong to the same protein family, the saposin-like proteins. As both types of protein are implicated in the killing of microbes in vivo, it appears that phylogenetically diverse organisms such as amoebae and mammals use similar effector molecules to fulfil a comparable task. However, structural features have led to the assumption that the proteins display their activities according to different modes of action. To address this question, we analysed the antibacterial, cytotoxic and pore-forming activities of these proteins in parallel and in comprehensive detail. Interestingly, the comparison of activities revealed significant differences. Whereas NK-lysin, recombinantly expressed, is efficient at a broad range of pH values, the amoebapores exhibited a pronounced pH dependence of all their activities, with markedly decreased activity at pH values above 6. Moreover, increasing salinity affects amoebapores more drastically than NK-lysin. All of the proteins compared were found to be potently active against Gram-positive bacteria, but only NK-lysin was equally efficient against Gram-negative bacteria. However, the amoebapores displayed five times higher pore-forming activity than NK-lysin, which is in accordance with the more hydrophobic character of the amoebapores compared with the essentially cationic NK-lysin

    NK-Lysin and Its Shortened Analog NK-2 Exhibit Potent Activities against Trypanosoma cruzi

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    Antimicrobial peptides are widespread in nature and have been evolutionarily conserved as essential tools for combating a variety of pathogens. Among the plethora of natural peptides and synthetic analogs thereof studied in recent years for their antimicrobial activities, only a very few are known to be effective against protozoan parasites. In the present study we investigated the activity of NK-lysin, a broad-spectrum effector polypeptide of mammalian cytotoxic lymphocytes, against trypomastigotes of the human pathogen Trypanosoma cruzi in vitro. Moreover, the activity of a synthetic peptide named NK-2 that corresponds to the cationic core region of NK-lysin was tested in parallel against this parasite. T. cruzi was found to be highly susceptible to both peptides, as evidenced by inhibition of the mobility of trypomastigotes. The peptides rapidly permeabilized the plasma membrane of the parasite since micromolar concentrations resulted in the release of cytosolic enzymes within minutes. NK-lysin and NK-2 were even found to kill trypanosomes residing inside the human glioblastoma cell line 86HG39, but only NK-2 left the host cells apparently unharmed
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