Aerial view of Naples with Mount Vesuvius at sunset

The Climate, Hazards and Environmental Change Research Cluster

Engaging in multi-disciplinary research on climate change, hazards, disasters and sustainability.

Extreme flooding in a residential area

About us

The Climate, Hazards and Environmental Change Research Cluster draws on perspectives from multiple disciplines including human geography, physical geography, archaeology, biology, nutritional sciences and philosophy.

Our research has focused on a variety of topics, including:

  • Quaternary environmental change
  • Critical perspectives on climate change adaptation
  • Historical perspectives on wildfire hazards
  • Coastal floods and tsunamis
  • Flood risk management
  • Vulnerability to volcanic hazards
  • Environmental archaeology and paleoecology
  • Political ecologies of resource extraction.

Our researchers have experience of working in numerous locations including the UK, Ireland, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Bhutan, Italy, Germany, Russia, Ecuador, the Dominican Republic and the United States.

A dry riverbed due to prolonged drought. A bridge crosses over the riverbed.

Impact, engagement and collaboration

We are committed to research with impact and to collaborations with local communities, policy makers and industry. As university teachers and researchers, we are also committed to research-informed teaching, and to providing our students with opportunities to engage with and participate in research.

Our research informs our teaching contributions to degree programmes across the School of Sciences, including in Geography, Global Development and Sustainability, Environmental Science, Wildlife Conservation and Biology.

We are also affiliated with the University's Centre for Research on Science and Society and the Research Centre for Environmental Humanities.

A vast flooded landscape of water over fields, with a few buildings and trees emerging from the still waters

Our events

Our online research lecture series is open to the public. To find out more or register to attend an online lecture, please visit our events page.

Recordings of some of our past events are also available on YouTube.

Browse our events
People walk amongst the rubble and remains of buildings after a major earthquake in a town.

Get in touch

If you're interested in our research, please contact our Cluster Director, Dr Jim Jeffers. Alternatively, speak to any member of our group.

Cluster Director