 Hi, I am Advait. I am from Bangalore, India. I am currently studying my fourth year in law. And yeah, I study law and I'm a law student. The idea behind choosing the summer school was purely from an academic perspective that I wanted to broaden my horizons as to studying different subjects. And since climate change in India back home is not a very explored subject from the legal perspective. I thought this summer school would give me a good opportunity to study climate change from a multidisciplinary aspect. I would certainly think my expectations, they've exceeded my expectations rather because I had a very limited understanding of climate change. I just think I knew the textbook definition of climate change but now I think I'm more appreciative of the entire process and it's not merely from the environmental perspective, there's a lot of economics behind it, there's a lot of politics behind it and there's definitely a lot of development left in the legal area as well. As a student of law, a few concepts were new to me that I wasn't aware of but they were explained in a very simple term, in simple terms. So I could grasp the concept and I did a little bit more reading when I went back to the hostel to just breeze through the other areas. I think burn has a lot to offer, be it education wise or be if you want to be touristy or you want to be an adventure junkie. So I'm more of the museum visiting kind of person. So burn has a lot of museums. There's something for everyone in burn. You might be an introverted solo traveler just going through museums or you just like to jump into the array. Everything is possible here. I would most definitely recommend my friends or my juniors or my seniors to definitely attend this summer school because I think the intercultural exchange is something very important and I think we should learn about other perspectives and have a dialogue and I think the dialogue is always welcome in any field but specifically in climate change because we're all in this together. I know it sounds cheesy but that's the truth. So I think so the more we speak and the more we interact and the more we learn our common wealth increases.