UNESCO-MOST BRIDGES PUBLISHED CALLS
Following protocol approved at the BRIDGES Governing Council meeting in February 2025, the UNESCO-MOST BRIDGES recently launched 3 separate schemes; publishing calls for the following:
Following protocol approved at the BRIDGES Governing Council meeting in February 2025, the UNESCO-MOST BRIDGES recently launched 3 separate schemes; publishing calls for the following:
The CCHRI annual entry-level workshop took place as usual in January and introduced over twenty participants from the fields of history and archaeology to the palaeoecological sciences and their relevance to historical and archaeological research.
Here follows details of recent Climate Change and History Research Initiative (CCHRI) related publications. CCHRI is a lead partner in the UNESCO-MOST BRIDGES CUNY-Princeton Thematic Hub. The first three publications below are specifically relevant to CCHRI’s BRIDGES-related projects:
On Thursday 10th April Profs. Louise Steel and Luci Attala presented Heritage Tales of Coastal Adaptation in Northern Regions at the Apheleia bi-weekly online conference series, chaired by Professor Luis Oosterbeek, president of CIPSH (International Council for the Philosophy and Human Sciences).
The plenary session of the online Midterm Event for the Belmont Forum’s Climate and Cultural Heritage projects took place on Tuesday 29th April. Sixteen projects were selected for funding by the Belmont Forum, including Coastal TALES.