The Science of Climate Change

4区 法学 Q1 Social Sciences Future of Children Pub Date : 2016-03-01 DOI:10.1353/FOC.2016.0001
M. Oppenheimer, J. Anttila-Hughes
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引用次数: 17

Abstract

Summary: Michael Oppenheimer and Jesse Anttila-Hughes begin with a primer on how the greenhouse effect works, how we know that Earth is rapidly getting warmer, and how we know that the recent warming is caused by human activity. They explain the sources of scientific knowledge about climate change as well as the basis for the models scientists use to predict how the climate will behave in the future. Although they acknowledge the large degree of uncertainty that surrounds predictions of what will happen decades or even centuries in the future, they also emphasize the near certainty that climate change has the potential to be extremely harmful to children. Most children around the world will face hotter, more extreme temperatures more frequently. Higher temperatures will directly affect children’s health by increasing the rates of heatstroke, heat exhaustion, and heat-related mortality. Excessive heat is also likely to affect children indirectly by disrupting agricultural systems, driving up prices, and increasing food scarcity. Many of the world’s children may see local demand for water outstrip supply, as shifting precipitation patterns dry out some regions of the world, make other regions wetter, and increase the frequency of both unusually dry periods and unusually severe rains. Mountain glaciers will recede further, significantly reducing storage of winter snows and thus springtime runoff, which has traditionally been used to water fields and recharge reservoirs. Melting ice will also raise sea levels, triggering direct physical threats to children through flooding and erosion and indirect threats through migration and expensive adaptation. Climate change is also expected to make weather-based disasters more frequent and more damaging. This is particularly worrisome for children, not only because of the physical peril disasters pose but also because disasters can have debilitating long-term indirect effects on children. Damage to ecosystems from climate change may also harm children; for example, acidification the world’s oceans will reduce food supplies, and disease-carrying insects will invade new areas in response to changing rains and temperatures. In the face of such dire forecasts, Oppenheimer and Anttila-Hughes argue, climate change forces us to directly confront the value we put on future children’s wellbeing. Fortunately, we have reason for hope as well as for concern: “History,” they write, “has demonstrated time and again that humans can tackle uncertain threats in times of need.”
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气候变化科学
摘要:迈克尔·奥本海默和杰西·安提拉-休斯首先介绍了温室效应是如何起作用的,我们如何知道地球正在迅速变暖,以及我们如何知道最近的变暖是由人类活动引起的。它们解释了有关气候变化的科学知识的来源,以及科学家用来预测未来气候如何变化的模型的基础。尽管他们承认,对未来几十年甚至几百年的预测存在很大程度的不确定性,但他们也强调,几乎可以肯定的是,气候变化有可能对儿童造成极大的伤害。世界上大多数儿童将更频繁地面临更热、更极端的气温。高温会直接影响儿童的健康,增加中暑、中暑衰竭和与热有关的死亡率。过热还可能通过破坏农业系统、推高价格和加剧粮食短缺,间接影响儿童。由于不断变化的降水模式使世界上一些地区干涸,使其他地区更加潮湿,并增加了异常干旱期和异常暴雨的频率,世界上许多儿童可能会看到当地对水的需求超过供应。山地冰川将进一步退缩,大大减少冬季积雪的储存,从而减少传统上用于灌溉农田和补给水库的春季径流。冰融化还会使海平面上升,引发洪水和侵蚀等对儿童的直接人身威胁,以及移民和代价高昂的适应等间接威胁。预计气候变化也将使天气灾害更加频繁和更具破坏性。这对儿童来说尤其令人担忧,不仅因为灾害造成的人身危险,还因为灾害可能对儿童产生长期的间接影响。气候变化对生态系统造成的破坏也可能伤害儿童;例如,世界海洋酸化将减少食物供应,携带疾病的昆虫将入侵新的地区,以应对降雨和温度的变化。面对如此可怕的预测,奥本海默和安提拉-休斯认为,气候变化迫使我们直接面对我们对未来儿童福祉的重视。幸运的是,我们有理由感到希望和担忧:“历史,”他们写道,“已经一次又一次地证明,人类能够在需要的时候应对不确定的威胁。”
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Future of Children
Future of Children Multiple-
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期刊介绍: The Future of Children is a collaboration of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and the Brookings Institution. The mission of The Future of Children is to translate the best social science research about children and youth into information that is useful to policymakers, practitioners, grant-makers, advocates, the media, and students of public policy. The project publishes two journals and policy briefs each year, and provides various short summaries of our work. Topics range widely -- from income policy to family issues to education and health – with children’s policy as the unifying element. The senior editorial team is diverse, representing two institutions and multiple disciplines.
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