- Columbia University Press
The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars: Dispatches from the Front Lines
Key Metrics
- Michael Mann
- Columbia University Press
- Hardcover
- 9780231152549
- 9.1 X 6.3 X 1.3 inches
- 1.45 pounds
- Science > Global Warming & Climate Change
- English
Book Description
The Hockey Stick achieved prominence in a 2001 UN report on climate change and quickly became a central icon in the climate wars. The real issue has never been the graph's data but rather its implied threat to those who oppose governmental regulation and other restraints to protect the environment and planet. Mann, lead author of the original paper in which the Hockey Stick first appeared, shares the story of the science and politics behind this controversy. He reveals key figures in the oil and energy industries and the media frontgroups who do their bidding in sometimes slick, sometimes bare-knuckled ways. Mann concludes with the real story of the 2009 Climategate scandal, in which climate scientists' emails were hacked. This is essential reading for all who care about our planet's health and our own well-being.
Author Bio
Michael Mann has conducted research on various periods and issues in South Asian economic and social history from the eighteenth to the twentieth century. He has published numerous articles on environmental history. His research has recently expanded into the areas of urban history, urbanization and migration in the South Asian region. These investigations focus in part on questions of historiography.
His “Geschichte Indiens vom 18. bis zum 21. Jahrhundert,” published in 2005, has become a standard introductory text on its subject.
Since April 1, 2010, Professor Mann has headed the Department of South Asia Studies at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. He studied South Asian History, Medieval and Modern History, Indology and German Language and Literature at the Universität Heidelberg, where he earned his doctorate in 1992 with a dissertation on the agricultural and environmental history of northern India. For his thesis on the development of the British colonial government in Bengal, he obtained his postdoctoral qualification in 1999.
He has taught at the FernUniversität in Hagen, the South Asia Institute at Heidelberg, and the Global and European Institute of the Universität Leipzig. On a temporary basis in 2008/09, he held the professorship in Cultural Economic History at the Karl Jaspers Centre of the Universität Heidelberg.
Research Interests
- Telekommunikation und gesellschaftliche Transformation
- Stadt- und Urbanisierungsgeschichte
- Umweltgeschichte
- Geschichte der Geschichtsschreibung und Geschichtstheorien
- Migrations- und Arbeitsgeschichte
Source: Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany - Department of South Asian History and Society
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