Julia M. Puaschunder’s research on environmental justice has been recognized by a Nobel Peace Prize nomination.

Source above: NASA Climate Time Machine Global Temperature
Source below: Puaschunder, J.M. (2020). Governance and Climate Justice: Global South and Developing Nations. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
World Climate Change Winners (+ Index, Green & Yellow & partially Orange) and Losers (- Index, partially Orange & Red) until 2100 [googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vT1Hzyt6nzzggmsi2cCO9Xku1TQ3jySu6q9oixBBWzft002fVeyEyh7ArkMBeyRumeaF60LR35EC0Kc/pubchart" query="oid=897900121&format=interactive" /]
Africa Climate Change Losers until 2100 [googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vT1Hzyt6nzzggmsi2cCO9Xku1TQ3jySu6q9oixBBWzft002fVeyEyh7ArkMBeyRumeaF60LR35EC0Kc/pubchart" query="oid=1841927543&format=interactive" /]
Asia Climate Change Winners and Losers until 2100 [googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vT1Hzyt6nzzggmsi2cCO9Xku1TQ3jySu6q9oixBBWzft002fVeyEyh7ArkMBeyRumeaF60LR35EC0Kc/pubchart" query="oid=1409037117&format=interactive" /]
Europe Climate Change Winners until 2100 [googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vT1Hzyt6nzzggmsi2cCO9Xku1TQ3jySu6q9oixBBWzft002fVeyEyh7ArkMBeyRumeaF60LR35EC0Kc/pubchart" query="oid=1040010617&format=interactive" /]
North America Climate Change Winners until 2100
[googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vT1Hzyt6nzzggmsi2cCO9Xku1TQ3jySu6q9oixBBWzft002fVeyEyh7ArkMBeyRumeaF60LR35EC0Kc/pubchart" query="oid=1074540591&format=interactive" /]South America Climate Change Winners and Losers until 2100
[googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vT1Hzyt6nzzggmsi2cCO9Xku1TQ3jySu6q9oixBBWzft002fVeyEyh7ArkMBeyRumeaF60LR35EC0Kc/pubchart" query="oid=1291689560&format=interactive" /]Oceania Climate Change Winners and Losers until 2100
[googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vT1Hzyt6nzzggmsi2cCO9Xku1TQ3jySu6q9oixBBWzft002fVeyEyh7ArkMBeyRumeaF60LR35EC0Kc/pubchart" query="oid=1055798760&format=interactive" /]Source above and below: Puaschunder, J.M. (2020). Governance and Climate Justice: Global South and Developing Nations. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
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Mapping Climate Justice, Julia M. Puaschunder, Climate Change Windfall Gains Beneficiaries and Victim Countries around the World[/caption]
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Mapping Climate Justice, Julia M. Puaschunder, Climate Change Windfall Beneficiaries around the World[/caption]
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Mapping Climate Justice, Julia M. Puaschunder, Climate Change Victim Countries around the World[/caption]
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Mapping Climate Justice, Julia M. Puaschunder, Climate Tax and Bonds Climate Change Windfall Gain Beneficiaries per Inhabitant[/caption]
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Mapping Climate Justice results Julia M. Puaschunder, Climate Change Losses per Inhabitant[/caption]
Source: Puaschunder, J.M. (2020). Governance and Climate Justice: Global South and Developing Nations. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Climate benefits distribution mandate weighted by GDP per inhabitant
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Mapping Climate Justice, Julia M. Puaschunder, Climate Tax and Bonds Transfer Grantors[/caption]
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Mapping Climate Justice, Julia M. Puaschunder, Climate Tax and Bonds Transfer Beneficiaries[/caption]
Source: Puaschunder, J.M. (2020). Governance and Climate Justice: Global South and Developing Nations. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
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World Bank Headquarter, Julia M. Puaschunder, Washington D.C.[/caption]
World Bank Headquarters, Washington D.C., November 14, 2016
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Keynote Panelist, Julia M. Puaschunder, ‘Climate Change, Coasts, and Communities Symposium,’ Monmouth University, Woodrow Wilson Great Hall, New Jersey, USA[/caption]
Monmouth University
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Media coverage, Keynote Panelist, Julia M. Puaschunder, ‘Climate Change, Coasts, and Communities Symposium,’ Monmouth University, Woodrow Wilson Great Hall, New Jersey, USA[/caption]
[caption id="attachment_2806" align="aligncenter" width="300"]
Media coverage, Keynote Panelist, Julia M. Puaschunder, ‘Climate Change, Coasts, and Communities Symposium,’ Monmouth University, Woodrow Wilson Great Hall, New Jersey, USA[/caption]
New Jersey Television
[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XNqXGSuQgJw[/embed]~
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Global, Urban and Environmental Studies, School of Public Engagement, The New School, Julia M. Puaschunder, Intergenerational Equity: Corporate and Financial Leadership, Edward Elgar, Book Launch, Julia M. Puaschunder, 2019.[/caption]
Global, Urban and Environmental Studies (GLUE) Presentation
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Global, Urban and Environmental Studies, School of Public Engagement, The New School, Julia M. Puaschunder, Intergenerational Equity: Corporate and Financial Leadership, Edward Elgar, Book Launch, Julia M. Puaschunder, 2019.[/caption]
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Research Council Member Grand Hotel de l’ Europe Bad Gastein, Julia M. Puaschunder, Ecovalley Gastein[/caption]
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Never before in the history of humankind have environmental concerns in the wake of economic growth heralded governance predicaments as we face today. Climate change presents societal, international and intergenerational fairness challenges for modern economies and contemporary democracies. In today’s climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts, high and low income households, developed and underdeveloped countries and overlapping generations are affected differently.
The Mapping Climate Justice Project proposes a 3-dimensional climate justice approach in order to find a universally fair climate strategy. Mapping Climate Justice elucidates international climate regimes around the world based on geographic, technological, socio-economic and political factors. Presented in an interactive graphic solution, the project highlights different countries’ climate responsibility to share the prospective economic benefits and burdens of climate change equally within society, between countries and over time. Comparing international climate change prospects informs disparate impact analyses to derive redistribution mandates to protect the most vulnerable communities from climate risks and global warming costs.
While law, economics and governance scientifically-ground, the project is also enlivened by arts and creatively-staged in design nudges. Citizen artist and behavioral design professionals innovatively embrace a broad array of different stakeholders by inspiring empathy through emotions and behavioral winks with wit for eliciting humane care about our common earth.
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Future Climate Wealth of Nations
What is the optimal temperature finance gravitates towards? While we have empirical evidence for the optimal cardinal temperature for GDP production and international development links external climate conditions to levels of societal development, no literature exists on climate-induced-finance flows.
Research on temperature-dependent financial flows holds invaluable insights in light of climate change. The connection between climate change and finance will be drawn via price mechanisms. Given the extinction potential of crops, industry and service production in light of climate change, price mechanisms will be prospected with a hyperbolic tilt towards the end of durability and the closeness to extinction. The following research thereby takes into account that agents in their behavior can be constrained by shrinking timeframes for production in light of global warming. The contemporary acknowledgement of global warming and climate shocks is thereby assumed to affect the price expectations and hence actual market prices of commodities. Paying attention to supply and demand side perspectives, inflated prices surrounding scarcity will be first modelled and then back-tested on data about prices in commodities of food and beverages.
Future wealth of nations is introduced by the concept of climate flexibility defined as the range of temperature variation of a country. Climate flexibility is a leeway countries have in coping with a changing climate due to a broad range of climate zones prevalent in their territory. Climate flexibility can be grounded on the relative latitude and altitude of countries around the globe. The wider the range of latitude and altitude within a nation state, the more climate flexibility and favorable economic degrees of freedom for multiple production peaks is assumed. A broad spectrum of climate zones is portrayed as future asset in light of climate change shrinking climate flexibility. Global warming will continue diminishing territories’ economic production flexible when climate variation sinks. The more climate variation a nation state possesses right now, the more degrees of freedom a country has in terms of GDP production capabilities in a differing climate.
The degree of climate flexibility is found to be related to human migration inflow.
Climate change was recently found to affect countries differently. Given different mean temperatures and GDP compositions, countries around the globe will be affected varyingly by a warming climate. In the determination into climate change gain and loss prospects per country, climate flexibility is also integrated.
These preliminary insights aid in answering what financial patterns we can expect given predictions the earth will become hotter. Already now human capital flows and financial market inflows are significant into areas that are economically gaining from a warming globe.
When dividing the world given temperature ranges prevalent calculated based on the List of Countries by Extreme Temperatures, the following temperature range-weighted climate change winners (dark green) and losers (light green) based on climate flexibility are found as exhibited below.
Source below: Puaschunder, J.M. (2020). Governance and Climate Justice: Global South and Developing Nations. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
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Climate Wealth of Nations, Julia M. Puaschunder, Climate Flexibility based on temperature range[/caption]
Cardinal temperature for agriculture production
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Climate Wealth of Nations, Julia M. Puaschunder, Agriculture peak temperature for production[/caption]
Temperature range for agriculture production
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Climate Wealth of Nations, Julia M. Puaschunder, Temperature rate projections commodities[/caption]
Extinction-based market price predictions as deviations from normal price
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Climate Wealth of Nations, Julia M. Puaschunder, Extinction rate projections commodities[/caption]
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Harvard University, Mapping Climate Justice, Governance and Climate Justice, Book Launch Event, Julia M. Puaschunder, Palgrave Macmillan, 2020[/caption]
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Funding Climate Justice:
Redistribution Taxation-Green Bonds Strategy
Today’s urgent global challenges in regards to climate change demand for fast action of the global community. Recent research has elucidated the economic impact of climate change on the world and found stark national differences in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) prospect under climate change around the world. Climate inequality arises within society, between nations as well as inbetween generations.
Source below: Puaschunder, J.M. (2022). Environmental Justice. Dissertation in the Interuniversity Consortium of New York.
[caption id="attachment_7063" align="aligncenter" width="950"]
Julia Puaschunder, Funding Climate Justice, Alleviating Climate Inequality[/caption]
Climate inequalities are proposed to be alleviated by redistribution mechanisms enacted by a taxation-and-bonds strategy in a simple redistribution model and a sophisticated 9 index strong redistribution proposal.
Climate Benefits and Burden Sharing Model
A 9-index redistribution model for economic prospects under climate change is introduced in order to determine a fair share of relative expected short-term economic gains under global warming in order to offset for economic losses based on economic, ecologic, historic and political factors. The model determining redistribution patterns throughout the world is based on the geo-impact of climate change, the financial crisis resilience capabilities as well as the global connectivity and science diplomacy leadership of a country.
Empirically, nine indices provide a basis to determine which countries should be using a taxation strategy and what countries should be granted climate bonds premiums in order to enact a fair redistribution between countries. A country’s starting ground on the climate gains and losses spectrum, a country’s climate flexibility in terms of temperature zones and a country’s CO2 emissions contributions in production and consumption levels as well as a country’s CO2 emissions levels changes and the historically-grown bank lending rate as well as resilient finance strategies coupled with science diplomacy leadership and economic connectivity on the international level determine whether a country is on the taxation regime for funding mutual climate stabilization or whether a country will be on the receiving end of the climate bonds solution. The countries economically gaining from climate change and being climate flexible as well as countries with high CO2 emissions and not changing CO2 emissions levels as well as consuming goods and services from other countries but also having favorable bank lending rates and a history of resilience finance and crisis intervention expertise but also embodying science diplomacy and trade leadership advantages could be taxed to transfer funds via climate bonds for regions of the world that are losing from global warming and are not climate flexible as well as countries with low CO2 emissions and lowering CO2 emissions levels that are producing goods and services that are consumed in other parts of the world as well as having unfavorable bank lending rates and missing resilience finance expertise as historic science diplomacy and trade followers. The proposed taxation and bonds strategy could aid a broad-based and long-term market incentivization of a transition to a clean energy economy.
Source: Puaschunder, J.M. (forthcoming 2023). The Future of Resilient Finance: Finance Politics in the Age of Sustainable Development. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
The following worldmaps color those countries in red that are advised to fund climate bonds with a taxation strategy. The greener the country is colored, the higher bond premiums are advised to be paid out in this country. Countries that range in the middle of the index are displayed in yellow in the display spectrum from countries ranked on taxation strategy in red to the highest bonds premium recipient country colored in green.
(1) Climate winners and losers CO2 emission Index: Climate justice between countries could be based on the idea that climate change winning countries that contribute to human-made global warming in CO2 emissions should pay for the establishment and maintenance of climate bonds via carbon taxation, while climate change losing territories with low CO2 emissions should be climate bond issuers with a higher interest rate premium.
[googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQTJXX6ut0Ovh8wz4Xh9TkAX-8tNiNmen87hS3hn6mWeSPOn3LqPS_vwJ3bmfg0MccVe_RJgWxSlhU8/pubchart" query="oid=899050070&format=interactive" /]
(2) Climate winners and losers’ climate flexibility and CO2 emission Index: Climate change winning countries that feature relative climate flexibility in terms of temperature ranges on their territory and that contribute to human-made global warming in CO2 emissions should pay for the establishment and maintenance of climate bonds via carbon taxation; while climate change losing territories with low CO2 emissions and a narrow range of temperatures on their soil and thus low climate flexibility should be recipients of climate bonds with relative high interest rate premium and thus be relative beneficiaries in the common climate taxation-and-bonds transfer scheme.
[googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQTJXX6ut0Ovh8wz4Xh9TkAX-8tNiNmen87hS3hn6mWeSPOn3LqPS_vwJ3bmfg0MccVe_RJgWxSlhU8/pubchart" query="oid=1011698724&format=interactive" /]
(3) Climate winners and losers CO2 emission change Index: Climate justice over time could be fortified by climate change winning countries that contribute to human-made global warming in CO2 emissions and have a rising trend of CO2 emissions compared to other countries that should pay for the establishment and maintenance of climate bonds via carbon taxation; while climate change losing territories with low CO2 emissions that have declining CO2 emissions compared to other countries should be recipients of climate bonds with higher interest rates and thus be climate bond premium beneficiaries. This would create market incentives for countries to compete over CO2 emissions reductions and naturally lead towards a transition to renewable energy. As Puaschunder (2020b) found a correlation between being a climate change winner and CO2 emissions; the combination of having been a climate winner and having caused the climate problem is likely. This index could incentivize positive changes over time and is only one proposed index measure that may be combined or exchanged by any of the other proposed indices.
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(4) Climate winners and losers CO2 emission Financial Crisis Intervention Index: Climate justice between countries could be based on the idea that climate change winning countries that contribute to human-made global warming in CO2 emissions and have a history of financial crisis interventions should pay for the establishment and maintenance of climate bonds via carbon taxation; while climate change losing territories with low CO2 emissions that also have no crisis intervention expertise should be climate bond recipient beneficiaries being granted a relatively higher bond interest rate premium funded by taxation of CO2 emitting industries in climate winning countries with well-established financial crisis intervention means.
[googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQTJXX6ut0Ovh8wz4Xh9TkAX-8tNiNmen87hS3hn6mWeSPOn3LqPS_vwJ3bmfg0MccVe_RJgWxSlhU8/pubchart" query="oid=1282116375&format=interactive" /]
(5) Climate winners and losers CO2 emission Resilience Finance Index: Climate justice between countries could be based on the idea that climate change winning countries that contribute to human-made global warming in CO2 emissions and have expertise in resilience finance strategies should pay for the establishment and maintenance of climate bonds via carbon taxation; while climate change losing territories with low CO2 emissions that lack resilience finance infrastructures should be climate bond recipient beneficiaries being granted a relatively higher bond interest rate premium funded by taxation of CO2 emitting industries in climate winning countries with well-established resilience finance means.
[googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQTJXX6ut0Ovh8wz4Xh9TkAX-8tNiNmen87hS3hn6mWeSPOn3LqPS_vwJ3bmfg0MccVe_RJgWxSlhU8/pubchart" query="oid=2035187524&format=interactive" /]
(6) Climate winners and losers CO2 emission bank lending rate Index: Climate justice between countries could be based on the idea that climate change winning countries that contribute to human-made global warming in CO2 emissions and have a low bank lending rate should pay for the establishment and maintenance of climate bonds via carbon taxation; while climate change losing territories with low CO2 emissions that also have a high bank lending rate should be climate bond recipient beneficiaries being granted a relatively higher bond interest rate premium funded by taxation of CO2 emitting industries in climate winning countries with low bank lending rates.
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(7) Climate winners and losers consumption-based, trade-adjusted CO2 emission Index: Climate justice between countries could be based on the idea that climate change winning countries that contribute to human-made global warming in CO2 emissions due to goods and services consumption should pay for the establishment and maintenance of climate bonds via carbon taxation; while climate change losing territories with low CO2 emissions in goods and services consumption should be climate bond issuers with a higher interest rate premium.
[googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQTJXX6ut0Ovh8wz4Xh9TkAX-8tNiNmen87hS3hn6mWeSPOn3LqPS_vwJ3bmfg0MccVe_RJgWxSlhU8/pubchart" query="oid=1892339090&format=interactive" /]
(8) Science Diplomacy Climate Responsibility Index: The implementation of climate justice between countries could be based on the idea that climate change winning countries that contribute to human-made global warming in CO2 emissions due to goods and services consumption and have an established science diplomacy expertise with networks around the world should have a heightened responsibility to protect from climate change and pay for the establishment and lead in implementing the maintenance of climate bonds via carbon taxation; while climate change losing territories with low CO2 emissions goods and services consumption that are not so well versed in science diplomacy should follow the plan to accept climate bonds transfer payments with a higher interest rate premium.
[googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQTJXX6ut0Ovh8wz4Xh9TkAX-8tNiNmen87hS3hn6mWeSPOn3LqPS_vwJ3bmfg0MccVe_RJgWxSlhU8/pubchart" query="oid=424341529&format=interactive" /]
(9) Global Connectivity Climate Responsibility Index: The implementation of climate justice between countries could be based on the idea that climate change winning countries that contribute to human-made global warming in CO2 emissions due to goods and services consumption and have an established global connectivity through trade, finance and human capital transfer with networks around the world should have a heightened responsibility to protect from climate change and pay for the establishment and lead in implementing the maintenance of climate bonds via carbon taxation; while climate change losing territories with low CO2 emissions goods and services consumption that are not so well versed in global networking should follow the plan to accept climate bonds transfer payments with a higher interest rate premium.
[googleapps domain="docs" dir="spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQTJXX6ut0Ovh8wz4Xh9TkAX-8tNiNmen87hS3hn6mWeSPOn3LqPS_vwJ3bmfg0MccVe_RJgWxSlhU8/pubchart" query="oid=1447708405&format=interactive" /]
Coverage:
Berkeley Law School
Callaway Climate Insights
Duke University, Finance Regulation Blog, March 2, 2022
Duke University, Finance Regulation Blog, October 30, 2020
Environmental Sustainability, National Library of Medicine
MIT (Global Environmental Politics)
Nature, 2022
Nature, 2019
Latin American Post
Legal Theory Blog
Pension Policy International, August 20, 2017
Progress in Development Studies
Science Alert
Sustainability at Harvard University
TaxProf Blog
The Intergenerational Foundation
United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP)
University of Hawai’i, Manoa
[caption id="attachment_1252" align="aligncenter" width="620"]
United States National Academy of Sciences, Julia M. Puaschunder, Washington D.C.[/caption]
National Academy of Sciences, Washington D.C., March 25, 2017
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United Nations Headquarters, New York, November 22, 2016
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American Association for the Advancement of Science, Julia M. Puaschunder, Washington D.C.[/caption]
American Association for the Advancement of Science, Washington D.C. March 24, 2017
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United States National Academy of Sciences, Julia M. Puaschunder, Washington D.C.[/caption]
National Academy of Sciences, Washington D.C., March 25, 2017
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Adam Smith School at University of Glasgow, Julia M. Puaschunder, Annual Conference of the Europeanists, Council for European Studies[/caption]
Adam Smith Business School, University of Glasgow, Council for European Studies
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Since 2018, Julia M. Puaschunder served as Chair General at over twenty International Research Association for Interdisciplinary Sciences (RAIS) Conferences on Social Sciences and Humanities hosted at Princeton University, Georgetown University, Johns Hopkins University and Washington DC.[/caption]
Georgetown University, Research Association for Interdisciplinary Studies
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Mapping Climate Justice, Julia M. Puaschunder, Buenos Aires, Argentina, South America[/caption]
Buenos Aires, IAE Business School
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Mapping Climate Justice, Resilience Finance watch, Julia M. Puaschunder, Puerto Rico[/caption]
Small Nation Island States & Puerto Rico, Resilience Watch
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Spanish Royal Academy of Sciences, Julia M. Puaschunder[/caption]
Royal Academy of Science of Spain
sponsored by Instituto de Ciencias Matemáticas and
Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad de España
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George Washington University School of Business, Julia M. Puaschunder, Center for International Business Education and Research, Fellowship[/caption]
‘Intergenerational Responsibility in the 21st Century’
Book release at George Washington University, Washington D.C.
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Mapping Climate Justice, Visiting researcher Julia M. Puaschunder, first-ever hurrican in Europe watch[/caption]
Iconic first-ever Mediterranean hurricane in the Aegean Sea watch at Acropolis, Greece, European Union
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[gallery type="slideshow" size="medium" columns="1" ids="8229,8230,8232,8231,8233"]Declining winter and melting glaciers watch, Iceland, between European and North American tectonic plates
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[gallery type="slideshow" size="medium" columns="1" ids="8235,8237,8236"]Climate extremes and hurricane resilience watch, Bahamas, Caribbean
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Keynote Panelist, Julia M. Puaschunder, ‘Climate Change, Coasts, and Communities Symposium,’ Monmouth University, Woodrow Wilson Great Hall, New Jersey, USA[/caption]
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Media coverage, Keynote Panelist, Julia M. Puaschunder, ‘Climate Change, Coasts, and Communities Symposium,’ Monmouth University, Woodrow Wilson Great Hall, New Jersey, USA[/caption]
Climate Change, Coasts, and Communities Symposium
Monmouth University, New Jersey, USA
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Seismic activity land creation watch, Hawai’i, USA
[gallery type="slideshow" size="full" columns="1" ids="2936,2935,2934,2964,2965,2937"]~
Spreading desert and drought observance
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Mapping Climate Justice, Archeological preservation watch, Julia M. Puaschunder, Cairo, Egypt[/caption]
Cairo, Egypt, Africa
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Multinational Finance Society Annual Meeting, Julia Puaschunder[/caption]
Jerusalem, Middle East
[gallery type="slideshow" size="full" columns="1" ids="2210,2209,2220,2208,2221"]Desert & Singing Dunes watch, Death Valley, Nevada, United States of America
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Rising sea level watch
San Servolo at Venice, Italy, European Union
[caption id="attachment_5903" align="aligncenter" width="620"]
Mapping Climate Justice Coastal Observation[/caption]
Casablanca, Morocco, Africa
[caption id="attachment_5904" align="aligncenter" width="620"]
Mapping Climate Justice Coastal Observation[/caption]
Budapest, Hungary, European Union
[caption id="attachment_6508" align="aligncenter" width="560"]
Mapping Climate Justice Coastal Observation, Budapest[/caption]
Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation
[caption id="attachment_5905" align="aligncenter" width="620"]
Mapping Climate Justice Coastal Observation[/caption]
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
[caption id="attachment_5906" align="aligncenter" width="620"]
Mapping Climate Justice, Small Nation Island Rising Sea Level watch, Julia M. Puaschunder, St. Domingo[/caption]
Florida, United States
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Mapping Climate Justice, Rising Sea-Level Observation[/caption]
Aruba, Caribbean
[gallery type="slideshow" size="full" columns="1" ids="3779,3783,3781,3785,3780,3784,3782"]~
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Mapping Climate Justice, Julia M. Puaschunder, World Finance Conference, University of Delhi, India[/caption]
Mapping Climate Justice in India, University of Delhi, Faculty of Management Studies, 2019
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[caption id="attachment_8269" align="aligncenter" width="620"]
Mapping Climate Justice, Julia M. Puaschunder, Natural Sciences & Volcano activity watch, Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawai’i, United States[/caption]
Climate change world glacier observatory
Mauna Loa, Hawai’i, USA
May 2019
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[caption id="attachment_8279" align="aligncenter" width="620"]
Julia Puaschunder, Nepal, Mapping Climate Justice, Kathmandu, Himalayan Region[/caption]
Climate change glacier observation, Himalayan region, Kathmandu, Nepal, December 2019
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Mapping Climate Justice, Circular Economy watch, Julia M. Puaschunder, Cuba[/caption]
Circular economy witness, Havana, Cuba, Caribbean
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Founder & Principal Investigator:
Julia M. Puaschunder
Columbia University
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
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Columbia University, Julia M. Puaschunder, Prize Fellow and Scholar in the Interuniversity Consoritum of New York with placements at Columbia University, Princeton University, Yale University and The New School New York[/caption]
Julia.Puaschunder@columbia.edu
https://blogs.cuit.columbia.edu/jmp2265/
New York, NY 10025, SA
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Columbia University, Julia M. Puaschunder, Prize Fellow and Scholar in the Interuniversity Consoritum of New York with placements at Columbia University, Princeton University, Yale University and The New School New York[/caption]
Princeton University
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Princeton University Erdman Center Theological Seminary, Julia M. Puaschunder hosting Research Association for Interdisciplinary Sciences (RAIS) conferences since 2018[/caption]
Julia.Puaschunder@newschool.edu
https://portfolio.newschool.edu/juliapuaschunder/
https://portfolio.newschool.edu/puasj942
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Cooperation partners:
Columbia University in the City of New York
Friends of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) (FoI)
George Washington University School of Business
CIBER – Center for International Business Education and Research
Harvard Law School Situationist Project on Law and Mind Sciences
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
Interuniversity Consortium of New School
Oikos International New York City Chapter
The New School Department of Economics
The Parsons School of Design
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Advisory Board:
Oikos International New York City Chapter Board of Directors from 2016 to 2019
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Financial and in-kind support of the Austrian Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Bard Center for Environmental Policy, Elisabeth und Helmut Uhl Stiftung, Fritz Thyssen Foundation, George Washington University, Georgia State University Center for the Economic Analysis of Risk, HSBC Bank USA, Huebner Foundation for Insurance Education, ideas42, INSEAD Initiative for Learning Innovation and Teaching Excellence, International Association for Political Science Students, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, The New School for Social Research New York (Endowment Stipend, Fee Board Scholarship, President’s Scholarship), New School University Senate, Prize Fellowship of the Inter-University Consortium of New York, Science and Technology Global Consortium, University of Vienna, Vernon Art and Science, and the Vienna University of Economics and Business is gratefully acknowledged.
Output:
Work-in-progress
Books
Florea, N. & Puaschunder, J.M. (under review). The public’s environmental economics and policy making’s guide to climate change mitigation. University of Toronto Press.
Invited Section Editor: Encyclopedia of Contemporary Leadership and Change.
Puaschunder, J.M. (forthcoming 2023). The Future of Resilient Finance: Finance Politics in the Age of Sustainable Development. Palgrave Macmillan.
Puaschunder, J.M. (forthcoming 2023). Responsible Investment around the World: Finance after the Great COVID-19 Reset. Emerald.
Puaschunder, J.M. (Co-editor, forthcoming). Women in Climate 2021: Climate and Decision Making. Frontiers.
Publications:
Puaschunder, J.M. (2022). Environmental Justice. Dissertation in the Interuniversity Consortium of New York.
Puaschunder, J.M. (2022). Ethics of Inclusion: The Cases of Health, Economics, Education, Digitalization and the Environment in the post-COVID-19 Era. Bury St. Edmunds: Ethics International.
Puaschunder, J.M. (2020). Governance and Climate Justice: Global South and Developing Nations. New York, New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature.
Puaschunder, J.M. (2019). Intergenerational Equity: Corporate and Financial Leadership. Cheltenham, UK & Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar.
Puaschunder, J.M. (2019). (Ed.), Intergenerational Governance and Leadership in the Corporate World. Hershey, Pennsylvania: IGI.
Puaschunder, J.M. (2019). Corporate and Financial Intergenerational Leadership. Lady Stephenson, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
Puaschunder, J.M. (2018). Corporate Social Responsibility and Opportunities for Sustainable Financial Success. Hershey, Pennsylvania: IGI.
Puaschunder, J.M. (2017). Global Responsible Intergenerational Leadership: A Conceptual Framework and Implementation Guidance for Intergenerational Fairness. Wilmington, US: Vernon Press.
Puaschunder, J.M. (2017). (Ed.), Intergenerational Responsibility in the 21st Century. Wilmington, US: Vernon Press.
Puaschunder, J.M. (2010). On Corporate and Financial Social Responsibility. Vienna, Austria: University of Vienna.
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Mapping Climate Justice, Small Nation Island States, Resilience Watch, Julia M. Puaschunder, Aruba


