Responding to the Climate Threat Essays on Humanity’s Greatest Challenge

This book demonstrates how robust and evolving science can be relevant to public discourse about climate policy. Fighting climate change is the ultimate societal challenge, and the difficulty is not just in the wrenching adjustments required to cut greenhouse emissions and to respond to change alrea...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yohe, Gary, Jacoby, Henry (Author), Richels, Richard (Author), Santer, Benjamin (Author)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham Springer International Publishing 2023, 2023
Edition:1st ed. 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a Responding to the Climate Threat  |h Elektronische Ressource  |b Essays on Humanity’s Greatest Challenge  |c by Gary Yohe, Henry Jacoby, Richard Richels, Benjamin Santer 
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260 |a Cham  |b Springer International Publishing  |c 2023, 2023 
300 |a XX, 194 p. 17 illus., 14 illus. in color  |b online resource 
505 0 |a Five science questions that ought to be asked at the debate -- Key messages about climate change: an introduction to a series -- Evidence shows warming of the planet -- The evidence is compelling on human activity as the principle cause of global warming -- Extreme events “presage worse to come” in a warming climate -- Multiple extreme climate events can combine to produce catastrophic damages -- Vigorous action needed, and soon, on climate change -- Rejoining the fight against climate change is in the U.S. national interest. 
653 |a Climatology 
653 |a America—Politics and government 
653 |a American Politics 
653 |a Climate Sciences 
653 |a Communication in the environmental sciences 
653 |a Environmental Communication 
700 1 |a Jacoby, Henry  |e [author] 
700 1 |a Richels, Richard  |e [author] 
700 1 |a Santer, Benjamin  |e [author] 
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520 |a This book demonstrates how robust and evolving science can be relevant to public discourse about climate policy. Fighting climate change is the ultimate societal challenge, and the difficulty is not just in the wrenching adjustments required to cut greenhouse emissions and to respond to change already under way. A second and equally important difficulty is ensuring widespread public understanding of the natural and social science. This understanding is essential for an effective risk management strategy at a planetary scale. The scientific, economic, and policy aspects of climate change are already a challenge to communicate, without factoring in the distractions and deflections from organized programs of misinformation and denial.  
520 |a In addition to its discussion of topical issues in modern climate science, the book also explores science communication to a broad audience. Its authors are not only scientists – they are also teachers, using current events to teach when people are listening. For preserving Earth’s planetary life support system, science and teaching are essential. Advancing both is an unending task 
520 |a Here, four scholars, each with decades of research on the climate threat, take on the task of explaining our current understanding of the climate threat and what can be done about it, in lay language—importantly, without losing critical aspects of the natural and social science. In a series of essays, published during the 2020 presidential election, the COVID pandemic, and through the middle of 2022, they explain the essential components of the challenge, countering the forces of distrust of the science and opposition to a vigorous national response. Each of the essays provides an opportunity to learn about a particular aspect of climate science and policy within the complex context of current events. The overall volume is more than the sum of its individual articles. Proceeding each essay is an explanation of the context in which it was written, followed by observation of what has happened since its first publication.