In recent years, future climate change has increasingly been
recognized as one of the most important issues of the twenty-first
century, challenging the very structure of our global society. No
longer just an abstruse scientific concern, it prompts difficult
choices for both individuals and governments. Moreover, it is of
the first importance to those working in disciplines such as
climatology, engineering, economics, sociology, geopolitics, local
politics, law, and global health.
Emanating from across the social and natural sciences, as well
as in the humanities, serious scholarship on future climate change
flourishes now as it has never done before, and this new title in
the Routledge series, Critical Concepts in the Environment, meets
the need for an authoritative reference work to make sense of a
vast literature and the continuing explosion in research output.
Edited by leading scholars in the field, this new Routledge Major
Work is a four-volume collection of foundational and cutting-edge
contributions.
The first volume (Science) in the collection deals with the
development of the science of global warming and climate change,
starting with Tyndall (1861), through to the IPCC synthesis (2007),
and ending with the very latest research. Volume two (Impact
Assessments), meanwhile, assembles the best thinking on how the
potential physical, biological, social-political, and economic
impacts of climate change are assessed. This volume also includes
material on potential surprises that science is starting to
investigate, such as the rapid melting of the Greenland and Western
Antarctic ice sheets, die back of the Amazon rainforest, release of
gas hydrates, and other tipping points. The third volume (Politics
and Solutions) gathers the most influential research on
climate-change solutions; it encompasses global and local politics,
engineering, renewable energy, and geoengineering. The final volume
in the collection (Framing the Debate) brings together key
scholarship to question and explore how the climate-change debate
has been framed and reframed as a scientific, economic, security,
health, development, geopolitical, ethical, and cultural issue.
With comprehensive introductions to each volume, newly written
by the editors, which place the collected material in its
historical and intellectual context, Future Climate Change is an
essential collection destined to be welcomed as a vital research
resource by all scholars and students of the subject.
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