Poster's note: if anyone has the abstract for Jane Long chapter please paste it in the reply
https://www.routledge.com/Contemporary-Climate-Change-Debates-A-Student-Primer-1st-Edition/Hulme/p/book/9781138333024 Table of Contents Introduction: Why and how to debate climate change Mike Hulme 1. Is climate change the most important challenge of our times? Sarah Cornell and Aarti Gupta PART I: What do we need to know? 2. Is the concept of ‘tipping point’ helpful for describing and communicating possible climate futures? Michel Crucifix and James Annan 3. Should individual extreme weather events be attributed to human agency? Friederike E.L. Otto and Greg Lusk 4. Does climate change drive violence, conflict and human migration? David D. Zhang and Qing Pei; Christiane Fröhlich and Tobias Ide 5. Can the social cost of carbon be calculated? Reyer Gerlagh and Roweno Heijmans; Kozo Torasan Mayumi PART II: What should we do? 6. Are carbon markets the best way to address climate change? Misato Sato and Timothy Laing; Mike Hulme 7. Should future investments in energy technology be limited exclusively to renewables? Jennie C. Stephens and Gregory Nemet 8. Is it necessary to research solar climate engineering as a possible backstop technology? Jane C.S. Long and Rose Cairns PART III: On what grounds should we base our actions? 9. Is emphasising consensus in climate science helpful for policymaking? John Cook and Warren Pearce 10. Do rich people rather than rich countries bear the greatest responsibility for climate change? Paul G. Harris and Kenneth Shockley 11. Is climate change a human rights violation? Catriona McKinnon and Marie-Catherine Petersmann PART IV: Who should be the agents of change? 12. Does successful emissions reduction lie in the hands of non-state rather than state actors? Liliana B. Andronova and Kim Coetzee 13. Is legal adjudication essential for enforcing ambitious climate change policies? Eloise Scotford; Marjan Peeters and Ellen Vos 14. Does the ‘Chinese model’ of environmental governance demonstrate to the world how to govern the climate? Tianbao Qin and Meng Zhang; Lei Liu and Pu Wang 15. Are social media making constructive climate policymaking harder? Mike S. Schäfer and Peter North -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "geoengineering" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/CAJ3C-04tyNvP4pbRy7BHuxP2BdDMUdqaE-u_sEVOL6h-QOZqAQ%40mail.gmail.com.
