DiscoverStories for the futureHow Culture Shapes Climate Action – with Climate Anthropologist Tessa Hartman
How Culture Shapes Climate Action – with Climate Anthropologist Tessa Hartman

How Culture Shapes Climate Action – with Climate Anthropologist Tessa Hartman

Update: 2025-09-25
Share

Description

What if solving climate change starts with better conversations, not just better tech?

In this episode, I talk with Tessa Hartman, a climate anthropologist and facilitator, about why culture shapes how we perceive and respond to climate challenges. We explore how empathy, social norms, and smart design can unlock new ways of working together – even across deep divides.

🎙️ In this episode:

  • What a “climate anthropologist” actually does
  • How culture, identity, and worldview shape climate action
  • The power of asking why in tough conversations
  • UX design meets sustainability – making solutions people actually want to use
  • Bridge-building between “opposing” groups
  • Lessons from Norway’s first national Citizen Assembly on climate and wealth


🔗 Resources mentioned:

Tessa Hartman on LinkedIn

Klimaantropologen (in Norwegian)

The Future Panel / Citizen Assembly (English site)

Book: Humankind by Rutger Bregman

Climate designer Katie Patrick


Stories for the Future

Veslemøy’s Substack


🙌 If you enjoyed this episode:

Share it with someone who cares about climate, culture, or community.

Subscribe and leave a review on Apple or Spotify – it helps more than you know!


Want to be a guest on Stories for the future: Beyond the Bubble? Send Veslemoy Klavenes-Berge a message on PodMatch.

You can always find more information about the podcast and my work on storiesforthefuture.com

Comments 
In Channel
loading
00:00
00:00
x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

How Culture Shapes Climate Action – with Climate Anthropologist Tessa Hartman

How Culture Shapes Climate Action – with Climate Anthropologist Tessa Hartman