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Lost in Translation: Closing the Gap Between Climate Science and National Security Policy
Author(s): Will Rogers, Dr. Jay GulledgeType of Publication: ReportDate: 04/25/2010This report explores the gap between the science and policy communities and offers recommendations for how they can work together to ensure the United States can effectively plan for the national security implications of climate change.
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Uncharted Waters: The U.S. Navy and Navigating Climate Change
Author(s): Sharon E. Burke, Dr. Jay Gulledge, Dr. Michael Horowitz, Christine Parthemore, Nirav PatelType of Publication: Working PapersDate: 03/30/2009In the summer of 2008, Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Gary Roughead, asked the Center for a New American Security to conduct a brief survey of the challenges global climate change may pose for the U.S. Navy over the next 30 years.
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Climatic Cataclysm: The Foreign Policy and National Security Implications of Climate Change
Author(s): Sharon E. Burke, Dr. Richard Weitz, Dr. Jay Gulledge, Christine Parthemore, Leon Fuerth, Alexander T.J. Lennon, J.R. McNeill, Derek Mix, Peter Ogden, Julianne Smith, R. James WoolseyType of Publication: BookDate: 05/22/2008Global climate change poses not only environmental hazards but profound risks to planetary peace and stability as well. Climatic Cataclysm gathers experts on climate science, oceanography, history, political science, foreign policy, and national security to take the measure of these risks.
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The Age of Consequences: The Foreign Policy and National Security Implications of Global Climate Change
Author(s): Dr. Jay Gulledge, J.R. McNeill, Peter Ogden, Leon Fuerth, R. James Woolsey, Alexander T.J. Lennon, Julianne Smith, Dr. Richard Weitz, Derek MixType of Publication: ReportDate: 11/01/2007Global climate change poses not only environmental hazards but profound risks to planetary peace and stability as well. For the past year, CNAS and CSIS convened a diverse group of experts on climate science, oceanography, history, political science, foreign policy, and national security to take the measure of these risks. The contributors developed three scenarios of what the future may hold and then analyze the security implications of these scenarios, which at a minimum include increased disease proliferation; tensions caused by large-scale migration; and conflict sparked by resource scarcity, particularly in Africa. They consider what we can learn from the experience of early civilizations confronted with natural disaster, and they ask what the three largest emitters of greenhouse gases – the United States, the European Union, and China – can do to reduce and manage future risks.
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