This anthology of scholarly essays on climate change, sustainable development, and human security presents a comprehensive analysis of severe global warming and its potential to impact all aspects of human life and security. It has been observed that climate change will most drastically impact poor tropical regions of the world for various reasons. The main focus of this collection of essays is to analyze the pro and cons of the global warming and climate change debate among scholars, policymakers, and scientists, as well as to examine the potential adverse impact of global warming/climate change on social and economic development and human security (food, health, immigration etc.). Much controversy exists on the topic, and many scientific reports issued by think tanks, United Nations, groups of scientists, NGOs, environmentalists, and policymakers are concerned about it. An extensive discussion and review of literature sets the tone and framework for the volume, and facilitates the volume’s analyses of the relationship between prevailing climate change/global warming models and their ability to provide us information on the topic. Exclusion of North America is deliberate; included are case studies from countries in Asia, Latin America, Europe, Russia and the Middle East.
Contributions by: Maria Bondes, Antonio Marcio Buainain, Cheng Fang-Ting, Natalia Eremina, Leonid M. Gregoryev, Laura L. Janik, Craig Johnson, Palakodety Sita Janaki Kreshina, Norman Laws, Rebecca McGuire, Ramkumar Mishra, Roopinder Oberoi, Mahendra Prasad Singh, Miguel Rocha de Sousa, Alla Salmina, Clifton White, Paul Williams