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Using a risk management approach to tease apart the complex issue
of climate change, this book assesses the key vulnerabilities and
redirects the discussion to present a comprehensive plan to
overhaul our response to climate change. According to the 2014 U.S.
Climate Report, temperatures might increase by 5 degrees even with
aggressive strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and could
increase by as much as 10 degrees if emissions continue unabated.
The report also predicts increases in extreme weather caused by
global warming will continue. It is time to apply the lessons of
sustainable disaster mitigation and hazard resilience to respond to
the challenges posed by global warming, identify and assess the
options we have for addressing the crisis, and create a practical
plan for managing the problem. Unlike other books on climate
change, this one uniquely applies a risk management approach to
answer the question, "Considering what our policies look like now,
what do we need to do next to mitigate climate change?" Robert O.
Schneider, PhD, explains how the warming climate will affect
everything from peak temperatures and weather extremes to
infrastructure such as groundwater reservoirs, airports, and
wastewater systems, making the dire nature of the crisis clear to
readers in practical and personal terms. By enabling readers to
understand the scientific and historical contexts of the climate
crisis, the author makes a compelling case for the urgency of
implementing a national climate policy to respond to the challenges
posed by global warming. Introduces a broader audience to climate
change as a crisis already in motion that poses predictable risks
and urgently requires public policy changes and the creation of a
national climate policy Makes the "invisible crisis" of climate
change visible and comprehensible by enabling readers to understand
the problem in the context of hazard risk and risk management
Highlighting American cultural and political contexts, this book
provides an in-depth assessment of the breadth and magnitude of the
United States' errors in its response to the COVID-19 pandemic. An
Unmitigated Disaster chronicles and explains the U.S. response to
the COVID-19 pandemic. Emergency management expert Robert O.
Schneider considers the quality of U.S. pandemic planning and
preparedness; the quality and effectiveness of national, state, and
local response efforts; and the performance of national leaders
during this historic public health crisis. The book culminates in
an assessment of how a predictable public health threat became an
unprecedented health, economic, and security disaster. Schneider
convincingly shows that conscious decisions were made by
governmental authorities, beginning with the president, to ignore
expert information and security intelligence in pursuit of other
objectives. In other words, Schneider argues, if the U.S. was
ill-prepared for or slow to respond to the crisis, it was because
its leaders consciously chose to be ill-prepared or slow to
respond. Readers will be fascinated by this behind-the-scenes
expose of a pandemic year. Provides a political analysis and
historical documentation of COVID-19 in real time Includes insights
from the author's expertise in disaster preparedness, mitigation,
and response Demonstrates why the United States stood alone as the
only affluent nation to have suffered severe and sustained
outbreaks for the entire year in 2020 Explains the nature and the
degree of U.S. failure to respond to the pandemic Offers the
definitive answer to the question "Was the United States prepared
for the pandemic?"
This book explains why science and politics collide, why this is an
especially critical problem at this precise time in U.S. history,
and what should be done to ensure that science and politics
coincide. The United States is waging a political war against
science, and the stakes are increasing. When it comes to areas in
which science and politics must interact, such as genetics,
climate, and energy, there are always political interests pushing
to spin the relevant science, but this becomes problematic when
Americans abandon rationality for ideology or misinformation
manufactured to confuse and persuade them. In a series of five
contemporary examples, When Science and Politics Collide: The
Public Interest at Risk makes the case that none of the ways in
which science and politics currently communicate serve the public
interest and that some of them actually result in great harm. It
explains that whether disagreements are about climate change,
vaccines, pandemics, or fracking, experimentally proven and
reproducible data and evidence can save lives—and poor,
politically motivated policies can doom them. The book concludes
with recommendations for creating a more perfect union between
scientific facts and political agendas.
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