Preindustrial human environmental impacts: Are there lessons for global change science and policy?

Chemosphere ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 827-832 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel M. Kammen ◽  
Kirk R. Smith ◽  
A.Terry Rambo ◽  
M.A.K. Khalil
BioScience ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 68 (7) ◽  
pp. 481-484 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliver T Coomes ◽  
Graham K MacDonald ◽  
Yann le Polain de Waroux

Author(s):  
James R. Fleming

Apprehensions have been multiplying rapidly that we are approaching a crisis in our relationship with nature, one that could have potentially catastrophic results for the sustainability of civilization and even the habitability of the planet. Much of the concern is rightfully focused on changes in the atmosphere caused by human activities. Only a century after the discovery of the stratosphere, only five decades after the invention of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), and only two decades after atmospheric chemists warned of the destructive nature of chlorine and other compounds, we fear that ozone in the stratosphere is being damaged by human activity. Only a century after the first models of the carbon cycle were developed, only three decades after regular CO2 measurements began at Mauna Loa Observatory, and only two decades after climate modelers first doubled the CO2 in a computerized atmosphere, we fear that the Earth may experience a sudden and possibly catastrophic warming caused by industrial pollution. These and other environmental problems were brought to our attention mainly by scientists and engineers, but the problems belong to us all. Recently, policy-oriented social scientists, public officials, and diplomats have turned their attention to the complex human dimensions of these issues. New interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary collaborations have arisen between scientists and policymakers to examine the extremely challenging issues raised by global change. There has been a rising tide of literature—scholarly works, new journals, textbooks, government documents, treaties, popular accounts—some quite innovative, others derivative and somewhat repetitious. This has resulted in growing public awareness of environmental issues, new understanding of global change science and policy, widespread concerns over environmental risks, and recently formulated plans to intervene in the global environment through various forms of social and behavioral engineering, and possibly geoengineering. Global change is now at the center of an international agenda to understand, predict, protect, and possibly control the global environment. The changing nature of global change—the historical dimension—has not received adequate attention. Most writing addresses current issues in either science or policy; much of it draws on a few authoritative scientific statements such as those by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC); almost none of it is informed by historical sensibility.


2018 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 553-581 ◽  
Author(s):  
THOMAS SIMPSON

AbstractRecent scholarship across a range of historical sub-disciplines shows that uplands are where many forms of modernity are both crafted and overwhelmed. Maintaining multiple tensions – between assimilation and distinction, between projections of power and material and human resistance, and between knowledge and elusiveness – is essential to the modernities crafted in mountain spaces. This review highlights a number of common threads running through recent writings on modern mountains. These include heightened attention to the importance of mountains as arenas for the performance of gendered, racial, national, and class-based subjectivities, and the persistence of earlier attitudes and activities in avowedly disenchanted modern visions of uplands. For all of the successes of recent scholarship, more work remains in order to consider mountains in global contexts and to come to terms with our continued entanglement in modern ways of understanding and acting in high places. Looking ahead, it is vital that historians think with and about mountains in order to contribute positively and persuasively to discussions on the human and environmental impacts of global change.


2016 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gina M. Solomon ◽  
Rachel Morello-Frosch ◽  
Lauren Zeise ◽  
John B. Faust

Geografie ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 103 (2) ◽  
pp. 108-117
Author(s):  
Martin Price

This report identifies the research and information needs towards a greater understanding of the impacts of interacting global processes on mountain regions. It provides an overview of the European Conference on Environmental and Societal Change in Mountain Regions, which took place in Oxford, UK, in December 1997. Since the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, the importance of mountain regions has been increasingly recognised in science and policy initiatives at all levels. Key themes for research on the interactions of environmental and societal change are: a) carbon and nitrogen cycles, b) biodiversity and protected areas, c) gradual and rapid change in mountain landscapes, d) climatic oscillations and extreme events. Long-term and co-ordinated monitoring is vital for both understanding and management of global change. The development of inventories of data and information sharing must be priorities. Central and Eastern Europe is an area of particular attention. Global change research in mountain regions must be interdisciplinary. Partnership of natural and societal scientists from diverse disciplines are crucial, as is the direct involvement of local people in all stages of research and its application.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gergana N. Daskalova ◽  
Diana Bowler ◽  
Isla Heather Myers-Smith ◽  
Maria Dornelas

Global change has altered biodiversity and impacted ecosystem functions and services around the planet. Understanding the effects of anthropogenic drivers like human use and climate change on biodiversity change has become a key challenge for science and policy. However, our knowledge of biodiversity change is limited by the available data and their biases. Over land and sea, we test the representation of three worldwide and multi-taxa biodiversity databases (Living Planet, BioTIME and PREDICTS) across spatial and temporal variation in global change and across the tree of life. We find that variation in global change drivers is better captured over space than over time around the world and across the previous 150 years. Spatial representation of global change was as high as 78% in the marine realm and 31% on land. Our findings suggest ways to improve the use of existing biodiversity data and better target future ecological monitoring.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document