About this Event
Limiting catastrophic climate change requires more than incremental emissions reductions. A successful response to mitigate the climate crisis requires a fundamental transformation of the global economy away from fossil fuels. Yet efforts to “defossilize” the global economy raise major economic, political, legal, and ethical questions.
In this event, Elisa Morgera, UN Special Rapporteur on climate change, will reflect on what a just and effective global transition away from fossil fuels entails.
In-conversation event with:
Professor Elisa Morgera, UN Special Rapporteur on climate change. Morgera is a Professor of International Law and Sustainability at Durham University and Professor in International and European Union Environmental Law at the University of Eastern Finland. She previously worked with the UN Food and Agriculture Organization in Italy and the UN Development Programme in Barbados.
Discussant: Dr Fergus Green, Associate Professor at the UCL Department of Political Science, and the Sustainable Development Theme Lead for the UCL Policy Lab. Much of his research seeks to understand the drivers of fossil fuel expansion, and to advance socially just response strategies. As well as having published in leading academic journals, Fergus has been a contributing author to three editions of the UN Environment Programme’s fossil fuel Production Gap Report (2019–2021) and has supported NGOs in multiple jurisdictions in fossil fuel-related climate litigation.
Chair: Professor Lisa Vanhala, Pro-Vice Provost for the Grand Challenge Theme of the Climate Crisis and Deputy Head of the UCL Department of Political Science.
Recording
This event will be recorded and the video will be uploaded to our YouTube channel.
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Seating and tickets
Seats are allocated on a first come, first served basis. We cannot guarantee you a seat, but it is very unusual that we have to turn someone away.
Accessibility
- The corridor outside the lecture theatre(s) is sufficiently wide enough (150cm+) to allow wheelchair users to pass.
- There is step free access into the lecture theatre(s).
- The door opening width(s) is/are 75cm+ for the lecture theatre(s).
- There are designated spaces for wheelchair users within the lecture theatre(s), located at the back.
- There is level access to the designated seating from an entrance.
- There is space for an assistance dog.
- There is a hearing assistance system for the lecture theatre(s).
- There is not a visual fire alarm beacon in the lecture theatre(s).
For more accessiblity info and an access guide please visit Accessable
If you have accessibility needs, please let us know and we will do our best to help. Contact [email protected]
UCL200
2026 is the year in which we celebrate UCL’s Bicentenary, marking 200 years since UCL’s establishment as the first University in London.
UCL Political Science and School of Public Policy are celebrating with a programme of seminars that relate to UCL's core research themes: Fairer Futures and Climate Crisis
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
UCL Institute of Archaeology, lecture theatre G6, 31-34 Gordon Square, London, United Kingdom
GBP 0.00











