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Collectively Seeing Climate Change: The Limits of Formal Models

This peer-reviewed article from BioScience investigates formal models used to study climate change. Understanding the risks posed by anthropogenic climate change and the possible societal responses to those risks has generated a prototypical example of the challenge of "collectively seeing complex systems." After briefly examining the ways in which problems like climate change reach the scientific and public agenda, we look at four different ways in which scientists collectively address the problem: general circulation models, integrated assessment models, formal assessments (e.g., the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), and distributed learning networks. We examine the strengths and limitations of each of these methods, and suggest ways in which a greater self-consciousness of the need for plural approaches could improve the basis for learning and decision making.

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Classifications


Resource Type: Journal, Journal article/Issue
Audience Level: Undergraduate lower division 13-14, Undergraduate upper division 15-16, Graduate

Author and Copyright


Authors and Editors: RICHARD B. NORGAARD and PAUL BAER
Publisher: AIBS
Format: text/html
Copyright and other restrictions: Yes
Cost: Yes

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Collection:
American Institute for Biological Sciences


     
   

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