Water, more than oil, is projected to be at the center of the world’s struggles in the twenty-first century, and "City of Water" is a case study for the need to harness the enduring might of poetry to generate, sustain and promote collective narratives for the protection of nonhuman aquatic environment, especially within the city. 

The production of globally sustainable futures today depends on the scientific research that is being done around the deep ocean, and on how regulators respond to pressures to extract from, transform and control the seabed. Taking into account these developments, Han’s project traces how the production of media technologies like seismology, autonomous gliders and cabled seafloor observatories have worked in the shadow of extractive industries like offshore drilling and deep sea mining. 

“The Unsung Planet” provides a critical examination of the complex relationships that exist between sound and the environment and invites readers into a more attentive awareness of the sonic dimensions of the Earth.

The song produced by comet 67P/C-G throws into stark relief the importance for thinking otherwise about the significance we place on human thought, human experience and human action in articulating the hyper-objective scale and deep time of our many complex sustainability issues and for engaging responses to these issues in some way.

Francoise’s research (and next book project) explores the construction of grief and its relief in three ancient cultures — ancient Israel, Imperial Rome and Hellenistic Judaism — in comparison with contemporary Western societies. Today, alleviation of grief is usually considered an individual task, achieved within the self. Symptomatically, the term “consolation” has fallen out of favor in English. The three ancient cultures selected present widely different constructions of grief, but all regard it as a fundamentally interpersonal concern.

SAGE’s Concept Grant program provides funding for innovative software solutions that support research in the social sciences. We are seeking proposals for new technological solutions that support the adoption, development and application of established and emerging research methods, including quantitative, qualitative, mixed, and computational methods.