News & Comment

Filter By:

Article Type
  • Like any human endeavour, geoengineering carries hefty doses of uncertainty, doubt and fear.

    • Mason Inman
    Books & Arts
  • The United States and European Union will face off against China and Russia as climate change starts to alter the geopolitical gameboard.

    • Keith Kloor
    Books & Arts
  • At the UN Climate Conference in Copenhagen this December, talk will turn to scientific, political and economic issues with a global reach and a long history — not easy to pick up from the daily news. We asked select experts on climate change what books we should be reading ahead of the big event.

    • Mike Hulme
    • Tony Juniper
    • Joseph Romm
    Books & Arts
  • It's the water-dependent modern world that needs saving, not Botswana's besieged Kalahari Bushmen.

    • Eric Roston
    Books & Arts
  • Contention can be an opportunity to connect, rather than an obstacle to engaging with climate change.

    • Maxwell T. Boykoff
    Books & Arts
  • New philosophies on climate policy are well and good, but to be meaningful they must be translated into concrete policy options.

    • Roger A. Pielke
    Books & Arts
  • Efforts to help the rural poor adapt to climate change should bolster resilience to natural disasters and climate variability rather than focusing on specific impacts.

    • Mason Inman
    Books & Arts
  • Words matter as much as images in communicating climate change.

    • William F. Hewitt
    Books & Arts
  • In this new book, economist Nicholas Stern makes a sweeping proposal for a global climate deal.

    • Frank Ackerman
    Books & Arts
  • Will future generations condemn our sluggish response to climate change?

    • Anna Barnett
    Books & Arts
  • A layman's guide to climate economics leaves the average reader unable to distinguish mainstream theory from heterodoxy.

    • Yoram Bauman
    Books & Arts
  • If future explorers came across evidence of human civilization 100 million years from now, what impression would they have of our existence?

    • Chris Turney
    Books & Arts
  • A clever use of fable brings surprising clarity to the story of climate change.

    • Euan Nisbet
    Books & Arts
  • An ambitious look at how global warming is wreaking havoc with natural phenomena suggests there are no simple solutions to complex problems.

    • Claudia M. Caruana
    Books & Arts
  • The hefty 2007 report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change gets a diminutive translation.

    • Jay Gulledge
    Books & Arts
  • Is a slow, measured approach to reducing emissions more cost-effective than taking immediate action?

    • Dieter Helm
    Books & Arts