Innsbruck
Austria

Managing alpine future II - International conference 2011

Organizer(s) alpS - Centre for Climate Change Adaptation University of Innsbruck Austrian Academy of Sciences
Venue
Congress Innsbruck
Date
-

During the three-day-event, current and future impacts of climate change in the highly sensitive mountain regions and their repercussions on ecological, demographic, socio-economic and cultural processes will be discussed.

Managing Alpine Future II focuses on sustainable adaptation strategies and technologies for mountain regions and takes an intensive inter- and transdisciplinary perspective and aims at effective cooperation and exchange between stakeholders from science, economy, politics, administration and the private sector as well as non-governmental and international organizations.

The conference will be organized in parallel sessions around seven core themes, which are: Climate Change, Natural Resources and Ecology, Tourism and Energy, Society and Culture, Ethics and Politics, Spatial Planning and Hydrology.

Furthermore, the organizers are pleased to announce Paul Crutzen, Jack Ives and Mojib Latif as plenary speakers.

Programme

- Climate Change: from paleo-climate to climate modelling
- Natural Resources and Ecology: from alpine meadows to ecosystem services
- Tourism and Energy: from mobility to snow-making
- Society and Culture: from education to migration
- Ethics and Politics: from consumer behaviour to multi-level governance
- Spatial Planning: from hazard zoning to land use changes
- Hydrology: from flood retention to integrated water resource management

Special Event

The launch of the “Making Cities Resilient” Campaign will be the highlight of the Tyrolean Night of the international conference “Managing Alpine Future II“.

National Launch of the 2010-15 World Disaster Reduction Campaign: “Making Cities Resilient: My City is Getting Ready!“
Monday, 21 November 2011, 19h

Editors' recommendations

Explore further

Share this

Please note: Content is displayed as last posted by a PreventionWeb community member or editor. The views expressed therein are not necessarily those of UNDRR, PreventionWeb, or its sponsors. See our terms of use

Is this page useful?

Yes No Report an issue on this page

Thank you. If you have 2 minutes, we would benefit from additional feedback (link opens in a new window).