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- Title
Living with anthropogenic climate change: Learning from environmental history to question narratives of doom, hope, and crisis.
- Authors
McManus, Phil
- Abstract
We are living with anthropogenic climate change and must address the causes and reduce the negative impacts on our planet, humans, and other species. This commentary offers a brief review of environmental history from deep time to recent waves of environmentalism demonstrating that climate change has occurred before; that people have faced perceived end times; and that predictions of doom have helped us to act to avoid that potential scenario. These are important lessons for how we may live today and into the future, given the shift from climate change denial to narratives of impending doom because we have already failed to act. The commentary presents a matrix of positions adopted in relation to climate change and environmentalism more generally, highlighting narratives of hope, doom, and urgency. While not exhaustive, these summarised positions alert us to possibilities and are intended to generate wider discussion about how we may live with anthropogenic climate change. We have to learn to live with anthropogenic climate change while addressing the causes and reducing the negative impacts on our planet, humans and on other species. We have to learn to live with anthropogenic climate change while addressing the causes and reducing the negative impacts on our planet, humans and on other species. This commentary offers a brief review of environmental history from deep time to recent waves of environmentalism demonstrating that climate change has occurred before, that people have faced perceived end times and that predictions of doom have helped us to act to avoid that potential scenario. The commentary presents a matrix of positions adopted in relation to climate change and environmentalism more generally, highlighting narratives of hope, doom and urgency and intended to alert us to possibilities and generate wider discussion about how we may live with anthropogenic climate change.
- Subjects
EFFECT of human beings on climate change; CLIMATE change; CLIMATE change skepticism; ENVIRONMENTALISM; ENVIRONMENTAL history
- Publication
Geographical Research, 2023, Vol 61, Issue 4, p525
- ISSN
1745-5863
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/1745-5871.12605