
"Erin Frank, a master's student in the Climate and Society program, believes that climate change is fundamentally a story of the humanities as much as it is a scientific one."
"Frank volunteers at the Olo Be Taloha Lab, where her work focuses on knowledge co-production and environmental knowledge systems that Western science has often sidelined."
"Currently, Frank is working on a website of photographs from a recent trip to the Dominican Republic, exploring tourism in the Caribbean through multiple, sometimes uncomfortable, lenses."
Erin Frank, a master's student at Columbia Climate School, uses photography to document her experiences and perspectives on climate change. She believes climate change is a narrative intertwined with the humanities. Frank volunteers at the Olo Be Taloha Lab, focusing on environmental knowledge systems often overlooked by Western science. Her current project involves creating a website featuring photographs from the Dominican Republic, examining tourism in the Caribbean through various complex perspectives. Frank's journey reflects her commitment to exploring climate issues through a multifaceted lens.
Read at State of the Planet
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]