Climate Change and the Health of Nations: Famines, Fevers, and the Fate of Populations

Anthony McMichael (Emeritus Professor, Emeritus Professor, Australian National University)

Climate Change and the Health of Nations: Famines, Fevers, and the Fate of Populations
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Country
United States
Published
24 January 2017
Pages
392
ISBN
9780190262952

Climate Change and the Health of Nations: Famines, Fevers, and the Fate of Populations

Anthony McMichael (Emeritus Professor, Emeritus Professor, Australian National University)

While natural climate change has occurred throughout human history, and populations mostly have adapted to its vicissitudes, we have now entered the Anthropocene era of rapid and perilous change caused by human activity. Tony McMichael, a renowned epidemiologist and a pioneer in explaining the impacts of climate change on population health, is the ideal person to tell the story of climate and human history. In his magisterial Climate Change and the Health of Nations, he presents a sweeping and authoritative analysis of how human societies have been shaped by climate events.McMichael shows how the environment has vast direct and indirect repercussions for human health and welfare. After providing an overview of the dynamics of global warming and the greenhouse effect, McMichael takes us on a tour of the entirety of human history, through the lens of climate change. From the very beginning of our species some five million years ago, human biology has evolved to adapt to cooling temperatures, new food sources, and changing geography. As societies began to form, they too evolved in relation to their environments, most notably with the development of agriculture eleven thousand years ago. McMichael dubs this mankind’s ‘Faustian bargain,’ because the prosperity and comfort that an agrarian society provides relies on the assumption that the environment will largely remain stable; in order for agriculture to succeed, environmental conditions must be just right, which McMichael refers to as the ‘Goldilocks phenomenon.’ Now, with global warming, humans are paying the Faustian price for our massive changes to the Earth’s environment. Climate-related upheavals are a common thread running through history, and they inevitably lead to conflict and destruction. McMichael correlates them to the four horsemen of the apocalypse: famine, pestilence, war, and conquest. Indeed, they have precipitated food shortages, the spread of infectious diseases, and even civilizational collapse. We can see this in familiar historical events-the barbarian invasions of Rome, the Black Death in medieval Europe, the Irish potato famine, maybe even the Ten Plagues - that had their roots in natural climate change.Why devote so much analysis to the past, when the terrifying future of climate change is already here? The story of mankind’s survival in the face of an unpredictable and unstable climate, and of the terrible toll that climate change can take, in fact could not be more important as we face the realities of a warming planet. This sweeping magnum opus is not only a rigorous, innovative, and fascinating exploration of how the climate affects the human condition, but also a clarion call to recognize our species’ utter reliance on the earth’s support systems.Key Features:Written by a pioneering epidemiologist who developed the connection between epidemiology and global environmental changeA new and important perspective on climate change, one of the most pressing issues of our era

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