Encyclopedia of Global Warming and Climate Change, Second Edition

Front Cover
S. George Philander
SAGE, Jul 10, 2012 - Political Science - 1641 pages
The First Edition of the Encyclopedia of Global Warming and Climate Change provided a multi-authored, academic yet non-technical resource for students and teachers to understand the importance of global warming, to appreciate the effects of human activity and greenhouse gases around the world, and to learn the history of climate change and the research enterprise examining it. This edition was well received, with notable reviews. Since its publication, the debate over the advent of global warming at least partially brought on by human enterprise has continued to ebb and flow, depending literally on the weather, politics, and media coverage of climate summits and debates. Advances in research also change the discourse as new data is collected and new scientific projects continue to explore and explain global warming and climate change. Thus, a new, Second Edition updates more than half of the original entries and adds new perspectives and content to keep students and researchers up-to-date in a field that has proven provocatively lively.
 

Contents

A chapter
1
B chapter
115
C chapter
171
D chapter
417
E chapter Part 1
467
Volume 2
i
Volume 2 Contents
v
List of Articles
vii
Volume 3 Contents
v
List of Articles
vii
P chapter
1083
Q chapter
1155
R chapter
1159
S chapter
1227
T chapter
1319
U chapter
1373

F chapter
555
G chapter
601
H chapter
703
I chapter
741
J chapter
809
K chapter
821
L chapter
845
M chapter
873
N chapter
967
O chapter
1041
Volume 3
i
V chapter
1425
W chapter
1451
Y chapter
1503
Z chapter
1507
Glossary
1513
Resource Guide
1525
Appendix
1533
Index
1551
Photo Credits
1641
Copyright

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About the author (2012)

S. George Philander, Knox Taylor Professor of Geosciences at Princeton University and Research Director of ACCESS (African Centre for Climate and Earth System Science) in Cape Town, South Africa, has a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Cape Town and a Ph.D. (Applied Mathematics) from Harvard University. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Geophysical Union, and the American Meteorological Society. Dr. Philander’s research interests include the oceanic circulation, interactions between the ocean and atmosphere that result in phenomena such as El Niño and La Niña, paleoclimates (including the recurrent Ice Ages of the past three million years), and future global climate changes. His two books for laypersons, Is the Temperature Rising? The Uncertain Science of Global Warming and Our Affair With El Niño: How We Transformed an Enchanting Peruvian Current Into a Global Climate Hazard, reflect his keen interest in improving communications between scientists and laymen. The goal of the African climate center, which Dr. Philander is currently directing, is to give Africa its own voice on environmental issues such as global warming.