The Case for Clumsiness
Most climatologists agree that by burning fossil fuels and engaging in other forms of consumption and production we are increasing the amount of greenhouse gases that float around in the atmosphere. These gases, in trapping some of the sun’s heat, warm the earth and enable life. The trouble is, some...
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2006
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-11252017-04-18T02:52:13Z The Case for Clumsiness VERWEIJ, Marco Douglas, Mary Engel, Christoph Hendriks, Frank Lohmann, Susanne NEY, Steven Rayner, Steve Thompson, Michael Most climatologists agree that by burning fossil fuels and engaging in other forms of consumption and production we are increasing the amount of greenhouse gases that float around in the atmosphere. These gases, in trapping some of the sun’s heat, warm the earth and enable life. The trouble is, some predict, that if we continue to accumulate those gases, over the course of the new century the average temperature on earth will rise and local climates will change, with possibly catastrophic consequences. Will this indeed happen? Does climate-change put the future of the world at risk? Can only a radical reallocation of global wealth and power rescue us from this threat? Or should people not be overly worried, as the steady march of technological progress will see us through in the end? 2006-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/126 info:doi/10.1057/9780230624887_1 https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230624887_1 Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Policy sciences Decision making Politics and culture Social perception Political Economy |
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Policy sciences Decision making Politics and culture Social perception Political Economy VERWEIJ, Marco Douglas, Mary Engel, Christoph Hendriks, Frank Lohmann, Susanne NEY, Steven Rayner, Steve Thompson, Michael The Case for Clumsiness |
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Most climatologists agree that by burning fossil fuels and engaging in other forms of consumption and production we are increasing the amount of greenhouse gases that float around in the atmosphere. These gases, in trapping some of the sun’s heat, warm the earth and enable life. The trouble is, some predict, that if we continue to accumulate those gases, over the course of the new century the average temperature on earth will rise and local climates will change, with possibly catastrophic consequences. Will this indeed happen? Does climate-change put the future of the world at risk? Can only a radical reallocation of global wealth and power rescue us from this threat? Or should people not be overly worried, as the steady march of technological progress will see us through in the end? |
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text |
author |
VERWEIJ, Marco Douglas, Mary Engel, Christoph Hendriks, Frank Lohmann, Susanne NEY, Steven Rayner, Steve Thompson, Michael |
author_facet |
VERWEIJ, Marco Douglas, Mary Engel, Christoph Hendriks, Frank Lohmann, Susanne NEY, Steven Rayner, Steve Thompson, Michael |
author_sort |
VERWEIJ, Marco |
title |
The Case for Clumsiness |
title_short |
The Case for Clumsiness |
title_full |
The Case for Clumsiness |
title_fullStr |
The Case for Clumsiness |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Case for Clumsiness |
title_sort |
case for clumsiness |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2006 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/126 https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230624887_1 |
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1770567974177996800 |