Delegates from Boston College to Attend COP 29
By Stephanie M. McPherson
When Kaley McCarty first learned about climate change as a high schooler, she figured it was such an obvious problem that it would be all sorted by the time she got into her career.
As an Environmental Studies major at the University of Oregon, she realized there was much more to be done – and more at stake than she imagined.
“I remember watching Democracy Now report on COP from when I was 19, and thinking, ‘this is where the global climate change work happens,’” says McCarty, who is now Assistant Director of Programs at the Schiller Institute, and the staff lead for Boston College’s 18-person delegation heading to from Nov. 11 through Nov. 22.
Four faculty members, six graduate students, and seven undergraduates are also attending the 29th annual United Nations Conference of Parties to witness negotiations on issues surrounding climate change. These delegates represent six of the nine schools that comprise Boston College. You can learn more about the delegation and their interests on our COP29 delegates page.
This is the fourth year Boston College is sending an observer-status delegation to COP and the third year that the Schiller Institute is organizing the delegation on the university’s behalf. The selection process began in May with a campus-wide call for applications. The response was huge, with nearly 300 hopefuls submitting to this first round. A Schiller-led committee of eight faculty, staff, and students - many of whom have previously attended a COP as a 㽶 delegate - asked the top candidates to submit multiple essays explaining the impact attending COP would have on their career paths and how they’d carry the lessons learned from the conference forward. Given that the university can only send a limited number of delegates, applicants were also asked to describe how they would contribute to the 㽶 community upon their return. By mid-August, the committee selected the 17 diverse students and faculty who proved a vested interest in various areas of climate change.
“People are looking at it from a law perspective, from an international studies perspective, a global health, a social work perspective. But climate change is central to everyone’s research and academic interests,” says McCarty.
Elizabeth Schwab, a senior International Studies (with a social justice and ethics concentration) and Communication major, became acutely aware of COP as a freshman and continued following it through the many classes she’s taken that have tracked its developments. Her thesis is on how world leaders frame the Paris agreement when communicating to their constituents, and she looks forward to attending sessions surrounding that treaty while attending COP’s first week.
“I applied to be a delegate to COP because I believe climate change profoundly impacts human rights and dignity,” says Schwab. “It’s essential to recognize that addressing climate change is not just a technical challenge. It fundamentally involves protecting the rights and dignity of people around the world.”
Korinna Garfield is a third-year law student attending the second week. Garfield is interested in environmental law and plans to attend panels on air pollution and the implementation of methane pledge – and catch up with the delegation of her former co-workers from her previous job at the
“Having this type of experience really sets 㽶 apart from other schools,” says Garfield. “When I was considering law schools, I saw that 㽶 law students could go to COP and that cemented for me that 㽶 was the kind of place where I could get real-world exposure to the field of environmental law.”
Praveen Kumar, Associate Professor, Boston College School of Social Work, is one of the faculty leads who will attend COP29 week 2. “When delegates are diverse like the ones we have that are going to Baku, the quality of conversations, exposure to new insights, and rational arguments (and even disagreements!) strengthen everyone's intellect on the issue,” he says.
Kumar, alongside Caitlyn Bolton, Assistant Professor, Lynch School of Education and Human Development, are the instructors of record on Schiller’s one-credit class called SCHI 5010: Forging a Just, Effective Climate Policy in the UN COP Process. In this class, delegates and non-COP-attendees alike have been diving deep into the history of COP and the intricacies of the climate negotiations that take place there through a series of guest lectures from experts in climate-related issues.
The stated focus of COP changes each year to reflect the rapidly evolving situation on the ground. COP29 will emphasize climate finance — how lower income countries can fund transition to lower carbon, and how to help the most affected communities adapt, for example. These initiatives need trillions of dollars, so much of this year’s COP will dig into who should fund this and how. Students prepared for these conversations and more with modules on why COP itself matters, how youth voices can make an impact, and leadership (with guest lecturer US negotiator Catherine Goldberg, herself a ’16 㽶 grad). They also looked at the nitty gritty of the negotiation process, down to the types of debates that might happen over specific language with articles and agreements.
“We have a couple folks who are specifically very interested in negotiations who are doing some research ahead of time to ensure that they can keep up with where the conversations are as opposed to needing to get up to speed real time in Baku,” says McCarty.
Both Kumar and Bolton, along with student TA Sancia Sehdev, have attended COP in the past, giving students valuable insights to make their experience successful. Kumar has been encouraging students to expand their networks, by meeting not only current major players but also youth attendees like themselves from across the world who will be leaders in this conference in years to come.
“The networks that I have developed over the years at COP have enabled my team, and by extension, Boston College, to demonstrate that we, as a university, are committed to contributing to bringing climate justice to the most marginalized and vulnerable,” says Kumar.
Upon returning home, delegates will bring what they learn at COP to the greater 㽶 community through a large symposium in the spring semester with panels, poster sessions, and a keynote speaker. The symposium will be a “mini COP,” which the Institute put on for the first time after COP28.
Upon returning home, delegates will bring what they learn at COP to the greater 㽶 community through a large symposium in the spring semester with panels, poster sessions, and a keynote speaker. The symposium will be a “mini COP,” which the Institute put on for the first time after COP28.
But the most immediate information dissemination will happen through takeovers and Broadcasts from Baku, live Zoom sessions that Dylan Carollo, host of the student-run , will moderate on and at 11 AM Eastern. Students will share their insights and answer questions from an in-person audience gathered to watch at the Schiller Institute’s Convening Space on the fifth floor of 245 Beacon. Each broadcast will be subsequently aired on the podcast.
“If we want to build momentum among 㽶 students to be climate advocates, the student delegates have an important role to play,” says Kumar.
McCarty is thrilled that her job at Schiller allows her to attend COP and make this extraordinary opportunity available to students — many of whom are the same age she was when she first realized the conference’s importance.
“I don't know if it's even fulfilling a dream so much as it is that I pinch myself because I never expected that I would have this opportunity,” she says. “And it's such an honor to be able to provide access to students who are so passionate about making a change.”