This content was published: April 19, 2022. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.
Instructor’s podcast digs deeper into root causes of climate change
Photos and story by Alfredo V. Moreno
小黄猫传媒 sociology instructor Ben Cushing thinks there鈥檚 something missing from the discussions about global climate change. In Cushing鈥檚 view, public conversations have too often been focused on the how and what, and not enough on the why.
In his four-part podcast, 鈥,鈥 Cushing invites listeners to begin rethinking these issues by exploring how societal systems, history and beliefs all contribute to the root causes of climate change.
By primarily focusing on the mechanisms of climate change, like the greenhouse effect or ocean acidification, or it鈥檚 specific catastrophic consequences, like drought or species extinction, Cushing said we鈥檙e missing an opportunity to more deeply examine and transform society as a whole. 
鈥淲hat is it about our society 鈥 our economic system, our colonial roots, our cultural beliefs 鈥 that seem to drive us into this crisis and constrain our responses to it?鈥 he asked. 鈥淨uestions like this require us to take stock of our society and our histories. And they help us connect the dots between the climate crisis and the related crises of racial, gender, and economic justice.鈥
Cushing, who began teaching at 小黄猫传媒 in 2008, said the podcast is based on his 鈥淪ocial Problems鈥 course as well as previous conversations with colleague Matt Glazewski, a climate science instructor at the college. Glazewski first connected with Cushing in 2019 in an effort to integrate more sociological perspectives into his classes, and Cushing said he hopes the multidisciplinary foundation of this work gives it broad appeal.
Like many instructors around the country, Cushing said a desire to better reach students outside of the physical classroom during the COVID-19 pandemic played a key role in deciding to launch this, his first, podcast.
鈥淚t was part of an effort to get creative with my teaching within the context of the pandemic and remote learning,鈥 he said.
The past two years have highlighted the topic of community and how to connect with and protect each other during times of crisis. Creating a more communal world that works better for the many instead of the few, is central to what Cushing explores in 鈥淭racing the Roots of the Climate Crisis.鈥
鈥淚 think it is abundantly clear that the climate crisis – and the broader ecological crisis – is changing everything,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s I say in the conclusion of the podcast, the climate crisis is a door to another world. The question is, to what world will it lead? What worlds will we build together?鈥
To listen to Cushing’s podcast, visit
