“Climate-Human-Environment Interactions: Resolving Our Past”
A review of how we can learn from the past about climate-human-environment interactions at the present time and in the future.
A review of how we can learn from the past about climate-human-environment interactions at the present time and in the future.
Autumn 2006 was by far the warmest autumn on record in the United Kingdom, Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark, Germany and Switzerland.
This paper illustrates, through a series of case-studies, how long-term ecological records (>50 years) can provide a test of predictions and assumptions of ecological processes that are directly relevant to management strategies necessary to retain biological diversity in a changing climate.
In this article, the authors argue that climate change in Japan is clearly shown for temperature over 100 years (1901–2000).
In this article, the authors argue that the rise of the Inca would not have been possible without increased crop productivity, which was linked to more favorable climatic conditions.
Climate predictions for western Europe probably underestimate the effects of anthropogenic climate change.
Anne K. Johnson tests the claims of cultural theory using the formation of climate change policies in Sweden, the United States, and Japan as case studies.
Stephen M. Gardiner discusses climate change, intergenerational ethics, and the convergence of problems which make climate change “a perfect moral storm.”
Jouni Paavola’s editorial for the Environmental Values 17.
In this paper, Richard S. J. Tol discusses gaps in climate change research and speculates on possible sign and size of the impacts of climate change.