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Moving Beyond Climate Change
Hulme. Mike
Environment, May/June 2010, v52, #3, pp15-19
"The rhetoric leading up to the Copenhagen Climate Summit last December (COP15) was deafening. Voices—some sombre, some shrill, some almost hysterical—told us that COP15 must deliver a deal “to save the planet” and “to protect civilisation as we know it.” These people characterized it as “the last chance we have to tackle climate change.” Such an atmosphere was not conducive to calm, considered, and realistic negotiating. And it was a task made harder because in recent years, so many other issues have been added to the tangled knot of climate change politics: the loss of biodiversity, the gross inequity in patterns of development, degradation of tropical forests, trade restrictions, violation of the rights of indigenous peoples, intellectual property rights, and others. The list seemed to grow by the month. The world arrived at Copenhagen with a Rubik's cube climate-change puzzle containing just too many dimensions to be solved."
Mike Hulme is professor of climate change in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, England.
Go to the article at:
http://www.environmentmagazine.org/Archives/Back Issues/May-June 2010/moving-beyond-full.html

D3/02-10 posted June 24, 2010

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