INVITATION
Dear colleagues interested in water issues, modelling practices and critical research,
How does hydrological modelling help to address water challenges in the Anthropocene? And can modelling contribute to foster justice, equity and care in water governance?
These questions will be the starting point of a public conversation to be held on 20th of September at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Prof. Margreet Zwarteveen (IHE Delft & the University of Amsterdam) and Prof. Tobias Krüger (HU Berlin) will talk with the audience about hydrological modelling, critical water research and interdisciplinary collaborations.
We would be happy if you could join us!
Public Conversation with Margreet Zwarteveen & Tobias Krüger
Is hydrological modelling political?
Wednesday, 20 September 2023, 19.00-20.30 | HU Berlin, Grimm-Zentrum, Geschwister-Scholl-Straße 3, 10117 Berlin, Auditorium
Fostering sustainable and just water distributions is one of the main challenges of the Anthropocene. Hydrological modelling is becoming ever more central in understanding and predicting water flows. The outcomes of hydrological models, in turn, may inform water management decisions. Hydrological models, therefore, are more than mere attempts to accurately represent changing water realities; they also interfere in and co-produce these realities. In this sense, they can be understood as political.
In this evening conversation, Tobias Krüger and Margreet Zwarteveen will exchange experiences, reflections and challenges about doing and critically researching hydrological modelling and more broadly water governance. What does it mean to attend to the politics of modelling? What role do modelers and researchers/academics more in general play in shaping water futures?
With:
Margreet Zwarteveen, Professor of Water Governance at IHE Delft and the University of Amsterdam; Tobias Krüger, Professor of Hydrology and Society at the Geography Department and IRI THESys, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.
Moderated by Rossella Alba, Postdoctoral Researcher at the Geography Department and IRI THESys, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin.
This public event is part of a week-long PhD Summer School on ‘Situating hydrological modelling’ hosted by Integrative Research Institute on Transformations of Human-Environment Systems (IRI THESys) at HU Berlin. During the summer school, a group of 25 international early career researchers take up the challenge to work on and reflect about modelling water, bringing together hydrological research and science and technology studies.
More information can be on the website of IRI THESys:
https://www.iri-thesys.org/outreach/events/?event_id1=9361