Ben Orlove Headshot

Ben Orlove

Professor of International and Public Affairs

Ben Orlove Headshot

International Affairs Building, Room 833

212-854-1543


Personal Details

Focus areas: Climate change adaptation, environmental anthropology, human response to glacier retreat in mountain regions, water management and governance, natural hazards and disaster risk reduction, urban sustainability

Benjamin Orlove, an anthropologist, has conducted field work in the Peruvian Andes since the 1970s and also carried out research in East Africa, the Italian Alps, and Aboriginal Australia. His early work focused on agriculture, fisheries and rangelands. More recently he has studied climate change and glacier retreat, with an emphasis on water, natural hazards and the loss of iconic landscapes. In addition to his numerous academic articles and books, his publications include a memoir and a book of travel writing.

Orlove taught for many years at the University of California, Davis. At Columbia University, he also teaches in the Master’s Program in Climate and Society, for which he serves as Associate Director. He is a Senior Research Scientist at the International Research Institute for Climate and Society, and is one of the four co-directors of the Center for Research in Environmental Decisions.

Education

  • PhD, University of California, Berkeley
  • MA, University of California, Berkeley
  • BA, Harvard University

Affiliations

  • International Research Institute for Climate and Society
  • Co-director, Center for Research in Environmental Decisions

Research And Publications

In The Media

"Woven through the [IPCC] report, glaciers illustrate the report’s key theme: the stark differences between a world that has lower emissions and more effective policies, and one that has higher emissions, and is less well governed," Ben Orlove writes in State of the Planet.

Feb 27 2022
Columbia Climate School

“The preservation of heritage is a core human right, the right to cultural self-determination and autonomy,” Ben Orlove comments.

Feb 13 2022
Columbia Climate School

“We never thought climate change would affect national boundaries. So many laws are designed for an old world, and we’re in a new kind of world now,” Ben Orlove comments.

Nov 22 2021
The New Yorker

Ben Orlove expands on how people in mountain regions across the world have been adapting to the changes in climate.

Oct 19 2021
Nepali Times

Ben Orlove talks about impact of distant fires on NYC: "these summer days where smoke comes in, making it unpleasant for everyone, and dangerous for many."

Jul 19 2021
Gothamist