Global warming policy: Is population left out in the cold?
Document Type
Article (peer-reviewed)
Publication Date
2018
Abstract
Many nongovernmental organizations undertake climate- and population-related activities, and national adaptation plans for most of the least-developed countries recognize population dynamics as an important component of vulnerability to climate impacts. But despite this evidence, much of the climate community, notably the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the primary source of scientific information for the international climate change policy process, is largely silent about the relationship between population dynamics and risks from global warming. Though the latest IPCC report includes an assessment of technical aspects of ways in which population and climate change influence each other, the assessment does not extend to population policy as part of a wide range of potential adaptation and mitigation responses. We suggest that four misperceptions by many in the climate change community play a substantial role in neglect of this topic, and propose remedies for the IPCC as it prepares for the sixth cycle of its multiyear assessment process.
DOI
10.1126/science.aat8680
Language
English
Recommended Citation
Bongaarts, John and Brian C. O'Neill. 2018. "Global warming policy: Is population left out in the cold?" Science 361(6403): 650-652.
Project
Population, Environmental Risks, and the Climate Crisis (PERCC)