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© Asjad Nqvi
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M
.Silveri | IIA
SA
IIASA corner
Science communicator Ansa Heyl bridges the gap
between researchers and the general public.
Originally from South Africa, Heyl joined IIASA in
2018 as the institute’s press officer and editor in the
Communications and External Relations (CER)
department. Heyl, whose background is in industrial psychology and psychometrics, changed her career
path when she started writing about science as a
freelancer while studying at the University of Pretoria.
“As soon as I discovered science communication, I
just fell in love with it – it’s the absolute right fit for me.
I enjoy the variety of it,” says Heyl. “I cover topics ranging
from air pollution to new model development to climate
change. It is never boring, and I get to learn something
new every day.”
The CER department aims to inform the general
public and stakeholders about IIASA research. In other
words, it gets the science out there and ensures that
the researchers’ findings are heard, for example, by
producing Options magazine. For science to make an
impact, it has to reach policymakers who can apply
the research to change things for the better. The role
of science communication is vital as it explains and
promotes scientific topics to a non-expert audience.
“It’s not about dumbing things down, but making
them clear. This is the philosophy I try to follow when
writing about science,” says Heyl who completed her
master’s degree in science and technology studies
with a specialization in science communication and
public engagement last year.
Spreading the word about
science
Researcher Asjad Naqvi uses mathematical models
to explore environment-economy interactions.
Naqvi first came to IIASA as a 2012 Young Scientists
Summer Program participant, and after completing a
postdoc program with the institute in 2017, he joined
the Risk and Resilience and the Advanced Systems
Analysis programs. The ecological economist works
with multi-layer networks, agent-based models, and
system dynamic models to look at how climate shocks
cascade across economic landscapes via trade,
migration, and financial networks.
“Climate shocks such as floods or tsunamis directly
impact people’s lives. This immediate impact also
spreads to other sectors via labor and goods market
disruptions. My area of research looks at how such
shocks cascade through an economy.”
Naqvi’s passion for science developed out of a
personal experience.
“I am originally from Pakistan and was living in Lahore
when the 2005 Kashmir earthquake happened. Despite
being several hundred kilometers away, I felt it,” says Naqvi. “I then spent a year in the mountains conducting
field work. Looking at the literature I realized that almost
no models existed on the cascading impact of climate
shocks in economics at that point in time.”
Therefore, during his PhD, Naqvi developed a
comprehensive agent-based model on this subject.
His current research interests include looking at the
environment-economy nexus from various angles such
as who pollutes and who is exposed; how one can force
an economy to be greener; and how climate policies in
the Global North impact the Global South via investment
and trade flows.
Understanding the
relationship between climate
change and the economy
People profiles
Ansa Heyl: heyl@iiasa.ac.at
Asjad Naqvi:
naqvi@iiasa.ac.atBy
Bettina Greenwell
By Bettina Greenwell
www.iiasa.ac.at30
Options Winter 2020
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band winter 2020"
options
Band winter 2020
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2020
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine