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Agenda 2030 Award for research on climate change, gender and peace

Christie Nicoson in the middle is the winner2024, Alezini Loxa and Phil Flores..
Christie Nicoson in the middle is the winner2024, in addition Alezini Loxa and Phil Flores were getting honorary mentions.

Research on climate change, gender and peace, sustainable migration and electric scooters are recognised in this year's edition of the Agenda 2030 Award. The winner is Christie Nicoson, a PhD student at the Department of Political Science, who will be celebrated and present her research at Lund's Sustainability Week.

For the third year in a row, the Agenda 2030 Award will be presented at Lund University. The award was established by the interdisciplinary Agenda 2030 Graduate School in cooperation with the textile service company Elis Sweden to recognise innovative research that contributes to sustainable development. The steering board of the graduate school has named Christie Nicoson as the 2024 winner. In addition to the award, she will receive a grant of SEK 25 000.

"Scholarship on sustainable development can be many things. It can stay close to established policy and existing institutions, or it can seek fresh ideas and go to other places for new and better understandings than the one’s currently on offer. We can be proud to have Christie with us to lead the way in that latter approach," says Markus Gunneflo, coordinator of the graduate school.

The nominated papers were of high quality, and in addition to the winner Christie, PhD students Phil Flores and Alezini Loxa were getting honorary mentions. All three are part of the Agenda 2030 Graduate School and this is the first time anyone from the school has won the award.

New and better understandings

Christie Nicoson's research focuses on climate change, gender and peace, and how these are interconnected and influence each other. Phil Flores graduated last autumn with a thesis on electric scooters as green innovations, and Alezini Loxa graduated in autumn 2023 with a thesis on EU migration policy from a sustainability perspective.

The motivation for this year's winner, Christie Nicoson, reads: "Christie Nicoson receives the Agenda 2030 Award for her project on a feminist ethics of care for the climate transformation. This is a project that deals with the impact of climate change in the specific context of Puerto Rico. What is especially impressive is how it travels from high-level theoretical concepts to micro-level original fieldwork empirics and back again. This provides a framework for appreciating climate change in the social, cultural and political contexts of especially affected communities as opposed to merely a biophysical and external threat with aggregate harms to humanity in general. What is more, through Nicoson’s work, new ideas are shaped and other voices are heard about what a sustainable future might look like."

Award ceremony in Lund

The Agenda 2030 Award will be presented at a ceremony in Lund's Stadshallen on 10 April, where Christie, Phil and Alezini will be celebrated and talk about their research.