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Hi, I'm Drew. Welcome to my low-sodium, boneless, fair trade website! I am a postdoctoral associate at the Duke University Nicholas School of the Environment and an incoming assistant professor of environmental studies and sciences at Oberlin College; also, my mind's eye exists only in a figurative sense. Be aware that this website is very large, and some of it is randomly generated. For the full experience, reload a bunch of times and navigate as follows:
Date: 8 June 2026 at TBD
Location: Washington University in St. Louis
I will be at the GEOS-Chem meeting, giving (1) a workshop on using CHEEREIO and (2) a talk on my recent reactive nitrogen emissions results.
Date: 19 June 2026 at TBD
Location: Oberlin College
I will be presenting a paper entitled "Beyond prices: multi-criteria signals for a social-ecological transformation" at the USSEE conference on behalf of myself and my co-authors Joël Foramitti, Walther Zeug, and Jakob Heyer.
Additional events, future and past, are available on my events page.
You can learn more about my research on the projects page, or you can read through all of our scientific papers and presentations on their respective pages.
Abstract. This paper explores the political uses of images generated by Earth System science. It argues that images of possible climate futures, maps of potential worlds of heatwaves and wildfires, are made legible to policymakers by an alliance with a class of climate-economy models that associate scientific estimates of climate impacts with a prescribed international policy and technology mix. While environmental models have successfully mobilized policymakers in the past by providing images of “planetary scenarios” accompanying different emissions pathways, with climate change a political actor outside the administrative state is required to overcome the entrenchment of fossil capital. The paper suggests such actors are empowered not by the rhetoric of scenario modeling but by the emerging practice of “planetary sensing,” where activists and stakeholders directly mobilize the planetary images generated by Earth System science as they work to evacuate prisons, track pollutants, and repair pipelines.
Pendergrass, D. C. (2024). "From planetary scenarios to planetary sensing: Models, observations, and political legibility." The Anthropocene Review. 20530196241270716. doi:10.1177/20530196241270716 | Read it here.
Read more of my writing here.
19 February 2021 | Listen here
In this radio interview, my co-author Troy Vettese and I spoke with Blueprint's Jonathan Green about how land use change might help us make sense of recent global fire crises from California to Siberia, Brazil to Australia.
Additional interviews and media are available on my interviews page.
"So fun you won't even need friends!"