https://ogma.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Index en-au 5 Review on IPCC Reports https://ogma.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:43718 Wed 28 Sep 2022 10:30:06 AEST ]]> Soundings: sensing and encounters in/with/of place https://ogma.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:38959 Wed 16 Mar 2022 16:53:23 AEDT ]]> From sociological to 'ecological imagination': another future is possible https://ogma.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:25645 Wed 11 Apr 2018 14:52:22 AEST ]]> The shifting baseline syndrome as a connective concept for more informed and just responses to global environmental change https://ogma.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:52568 Tue 17 Oct 2023 15:42:09 AEDT ]]> Lived experiences of environmental change: solastalgia, power and place https://ogma.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:42077 solastagia has been developed by environmental philosopher Albrecht to understand the psychological trauma, also referred to as place-based distress, experienced because of environmental change. In this article, we explore ways to further this concept. The article draws on ethnographic fieldwork in a village in the mid-western region of New South Wales (NSW), Australia, which is surrounded by three large open-cut coal mines. Over the past decade, the mines, in particular the Peabody-owned Wilpinjong mine closest to the village, have had a significant impact on biophysical, social and temporal landscapes in the area. We argue that whilst solastalgia may help explore the relationship between the environmental and human distress triggered in these circumstances, the sense of displacement and loss that emerge are entangled with questions of power and dispossession beyond the biophysical realm. Underpinned by a phenomenological framework of analysis, we contend that place-based distress should be understood as an ontological trauma, as the fabrics of place, belonging and the social relations embedded within disrupt the ongoing sense of being associated with home. These include the means to not only link to the past, but also to imagine the future.]]> Thu 18 Aug 2022 11:03:33 AEST ]]> Solastalgia https://ogma.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:960 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:29:54 AEDT ]]> Future warming and acidification result in multiple ecological impacts to a temperate coralline alga https://ogma.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:46545 Fri 25 Nov 2022 11:19:25 AEDT ]]>