Description
Climate Changed examines models and their imperfect yet central role in understanding the relationship between global climate dynamics and the human-built environment. It compares and synthesizes the methods and function of models in disciplines ranging from architecture and planning to climate science and natural hazards research. This book considers how disparate models are woven together to understand the climate crisis, underscoring the necessity of combining locally situated and transdisciplinary knowledge with climate science to navigate current and future cataclysmic changes. It highlights the challenges and consequences of disciplinary boundaries, siloed scientific knowledge, and uneven data and develops ways to overcome these limitations.
As the world faces the effects of climate change, climate scientists are debating the future of their field; architects, engineers, and planners are designing in the context of climate change; and society at large is grappling with how to take action. This book brings those communities together to chart a path forward.
About the Author
Mara Freilich is an assistant professor in the Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences and Division of Applied Mathematics at Brown University.
Irmak Turan is a building technologist, researcher, and educator specializing in the design and analysis of sustainable and climate-responsive strategies for the built environment.
Jessica Varner is an assistant professor of history in the Department of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning at the Weitzman School of the University of Pennsylvania.
Lizzie Yarina is an assistant professor of architecture and planning in the College of Arts, Media, and Design at Northeastern University.
Reviews
In Climate Changed, a well-chosen, multidisciplinary set of authors looks at the climate problem through the lens of the various types of models we use to understand it, with a particular emphasis on risks and opportunities for the built environment. Through that lens, a kaleidoscopic view emerges of the whole chain connecting knowledge to action. It's an innovative, insightful, and thoughtfully edited volume that should be of interest to a very broad range of scholars and practitioners. -- Adam H. Sobel, author of Storm Surge: Hurricane Sandy, Our Warming Planet, and the Extreme Weather of the Past and Future
Models reveal whether approximations of complexity are likely to fit in real life. The essays here consider climate models from different disciplinary perspectives, turning the Swiss cheese of our necessarily simplified climate models into an intriguing conversation about what we can see through the holes. -- Kristina Hill, University of California, Berkeley
Through a vast range of disciplinary perspectives, this book captures the mosaic of interests, biases, limitations, and opportunities that arise in the attempt to model complex phenomena. From the science and art of atmospheres to the emerging world of uncertainty, Climate Changed goes beyond despair to get at the heart of our dilemma. -- John E. Fernandez, director, MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative
Book Information
ISBN 9780231217705
Author Mara Freilich
Format Paperback
Page Count 248
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press