News
Games wake people up to climate change
December 02 2011by Agnieszka Flak
At the Conference of the Parties (COP17) of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Durban, December 1, 2011, Pablo Suarez illustrated games used to educate people on climate change during a side event.
When Pablo Suarez began teaching farmers, fishermen and emergency volunteers about rising sea levels and extreme weather patterns using scientists and a powerpoint presentation, people were falling asleep in their chairs. Eventually he decided on a very different approach."I had to convey the idea of a storm, of an extreme weather event, and I had a Frisbee and I just threw it into the audience," Suarez, a Red Cross associate director of programs, told Reuters on the sidelines of a global climate summit."And the audience woke up, they saw that there was danger." Soon Suarez began using games to explain more complex ideas like micro insurance to mitigate risks for subsistence farmers. He also teamed up with the Parsons School for Design in New York to create a number of climate games geared at communities, volunteers and policy makers. "Farmers in Ethiopia don't have insurance in their language so we introduced a game with stones, where everyone has some stones but not enough to pay for when their child gets malaria and has to go to hospital," the Argentine researcher said. Janot Mendler de Suarez from the Boston University Pardee Centre, who collaborates on the project, explained its impact. "When you have that 'Aha!' moment in the game you see people's faces light up," she said. "That's a knowledge that you're much more likely to act on." Games are not the only way to teach about climate change.In Uganda, a national radio network brings farmers onto the newscast to explain, often in the local dialect, what seeds or trees best to plant where and when.In Jamaica, think-tank Panos Caribbean enlisted the help of well-known local artists to write climate change songs and perform them at schools and in communities.Through catchy tunes, some of them performed to reggae rhythms, songs such as "Global Warning" or "Mother Earth's Cry" help people to understand the dangers, said Indi McLymont-Lafayette, Panos' regional director for environment. "Jamaica and the Caribbean are an oral culture and (people) would much more quickly absorb the message through music than through reading something in the newspaper or watching it in a newscast," she said.
Source: Reuters (original article: http://uk.reuters.com/article/2011/12/02/us-climate-games-idUKTRE7B10HY20111202
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Main topics:
- Disaster Management
- Health and Care
- Early warning early action
- Advocacy
- Communications
- Community risk reduction
- Youth
- Getting started
Disaster Management
Climate change can act as a catalyst for enhanced disaster management.
Health and Care
Many national Red Cross and Red Crescent societies will be touched by the health implications of climate change.
Early warning early action
Routinely taking humanitarian action before a disaster or health emergency happens, making full use of scientific information on all timescales.
Advocacy
The Red Cross and Red Crescent never works in isolation. Partnerships are more important than ever in the context of global warming.
Communications
The global climate is changing and the past no longer explains the present.
Community risk reduction
The Red Cross and Red Crescent has traditionally focused on response. But now other aspects, including risk reduction, are also given priority.
Youth
Red Cross Red Crescent youth take action to reduce the impacts of climate change.
Getting started
The Red Cross Red Crescent has a growing body of experience working on addressing climate change. Here’s how to use it to get started.
Take a look at Red Cross Red Crescent climate change activities on the worldmap
