A scientific book about climate change, that deals both with the science ... themes combined with a thought-provoking further-reading list at the end of each chapter, [it] will provide new knowledge ...
Climate change has become a rhetorical contest akin to a sports ... (To avoid scaring readers away, Marshall wisely saves that chapter for the end of the book.) Each chapter is an easily digestible ...
All those affected by these climate disasters ... read like a book, today I wonder if the story we are reading with our spiritual senses is from a rather dark and terrifying chapter in the same ...
How do we know that climate change is an emergency? How did the scientific community reach this conclusion all but unanimously, and what tools did they use to do it? This book tells the story ...
You don't have to look far to find evidence that climate ... in the book: "There's a conversation with the environmental journalist Judith Schwartz, called 'First, Nature.' And in that chapter ...
He had been arrested 20 times for civil disobedience, including the day before, when he and two others sat in the middle of ...
Perhaps counterintuitively given Republicans’ laser focus on the US border, Project 2025 recommends abolishing the Department ...
Climate change poses risks to banks on several levels: it can directly impact their finances, tarnish their image and land ...
As global temperatures rise, natural disasters intensify, and ecosystems degrade, McLean draws comparisons between modern ...
As international focus on climate change increased in the wake ... uses a format familiar to academic publications. The book carries a theme, but each chapter is authored by subject matter experts.
Chef and activist Camilla Marcus discusses what needs to change for us to begin investing in nature, and why strong ...
Here she envisions a “Next Chapter ... ignore the Paris Climate Agreement and Sustainable Development Goals. You’d be expected to respond to protests over climate change, #MeToo and divisive ...