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Governing Climate

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After decades of debate about global warming, the fact of the climate crisis is finally widely accepted. People at all scales—from the household to the global market—are attempting to govern climat...
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  • 01 October 2024
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After decades of debate about global warming, the fact of the climate crisis is finally widely accepted. People at all scales—from the household to the global market—are attempting to govern climate to deal with its causes and impacts. Although the stakes are different now, governing climate is centuries old. In this book, Zeke Baker develops a genealogy of climate science that traces the relationship between those who have created knowledge of the climate and those who have attempted to gain power and govern society, right up to the present, historic moment. Baker draws together over two centuries of science, politics, and environmental change to demonstrate the "co-production" of climate knowledge and power-seeking activity, with a focus on the United States. This book provides a fresh account of contemporary issues transecting science and climate politics, specifically the rise of "climate security," and examines how climate science can either facilitate or reconcile the unequal distribution of power and resources.
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Price: $95.00
Pages: 368
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 01 October 2024
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520401297
Format: Hardcover
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“A great read to stretch the mind. . . Spengler interrogates that idea in conjunction with the core of Darwin’s great idea, when he says. . .’Darwin used domestication as his most compelling case study for convincing humanity that evolution is real’.”

Zeke Baker is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Sonoma State University and coeditor of Climate, Science and Society.
Contents

List of Illustrations 
Acknowledgments 

Introduction: Governing Climate in the Past, Present, and Future 

Part I. Climate Change and the Coproduction of Meteorological and Social Order

1. Governing Climate in Early America, 1770–1840 
2. Meteorological Frontiers: Climate Knowledge, Territory, and State Formation,  1800–1850 

Part II. Stabilizing Climate, Economizing Weather

3. Climate Does Not Change: Agricultural Capitalism,Climatology, and the Stabilization of Climate, 1850–1920 
4. Economic Rationalization of Weather:Risk, Prediction, and “Normal” Weather, 1870–1930

Part III. Climate Crisis and the Politics of Climate Expertise

5. The Climate State and the Origins of a Climate Science Field, 1930–1980s 
6. Governing Climate Futures: Environmental Security and Security Technologies 
7. Future Struggles: Climate Security Experts and the Depoliticization of the  Climate Future 

Conclusion: Legible Alternatives? Remaking
Climate, Rethinking Climatic Stability 

Notes 
References 
Index