10 Jun, 2026, 16:00
UHH, DFG Humanities Centre, Gorch Fock Wall 3

Public lecture series
  • Associate Prof. Hillary Angelo (University of California, Santa Cruz)

    Solar struggles in Nevada: Climate change, city-hinterland relations, and the question of large-scale social transformation

  • This lecture is organized in cooperation with the DFG Humanities Centre "Futures of Sustainability".

    Abstract

    It is a common (aspirational) refrain that climate change “changes everything,” and equally common to note that climate-related transitions seem to be changing very little at all. What climate-related changes are happening now? And how might we grasp emergent trajectories while we’re in the midst of these transitions? With a substantive focus on the city-hinterland relationship and the American West, and based on five years of fieldwork related to renewable energy, conservation, and housing development on public lands in Nevada and Utah, this talk gets purchase on these questions by presenting climate change as a form of macro-social change. I draw on classical and contemporary macro-historical sociology and critical geography to show how this framework provides new insights on climate transitions and describe its implications for understanding contemporary climate politics, policy, and visions of a just transition.

    Bio

    Hillary Angelo is an associate professor of sociology, founding director of the Center for Critical Urban and Environmental Studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and former member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. Her work combines historical sociology, critical social theory, and urban political economy and ecology to analyze contemporary urban and environmental culture and politics. She has published widely in leading sociology, geography, and urban studies journals, and her first book, How Green Became Good: Urbanized Nature and the Making of Cities and Citizens, was published in 2021 by the University of Chicago Press.