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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Desert Arcologies And Path Dependencies, Sayd Randle
Desert Arcologies And Path Dependencies, Sayd Randle
Research Collection College of Integrative Studies
In Phoenix, Arizona last year, the local high temperature topped 100 degrees Fahrenheit on 145 days, a new record. Of those 145, 53 days saw top temperatures above 110 and 14 days exceeded 115 – also new peaks. Taken together, these numbers strongly suggest that to live out 2020 in Phoenix was to inhabit an environment sliding towards a painful, and perhaps even hellish, new baseline. Of course, numbers are known to occlude at least as much as they reveal. But in the case of Arizona’s largest metropolitan area, they’re useful for framing a certain conventional wisdom about the place: …
The Rural Price Tag Of California's Clean Energy Transition, Sayd Randle
The Rural Price Tag Of California's Clean Energy Transition, Sayd Randle
Research Collection College of Integrative Studies
In the spring of 2019, residents of eastern California’s Owens Valley were on the fight. As is usual in that part of the world—where a century of aggressive water extraction by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power has left the valley dry—they were angry about a water project dreamed up by some Southern Californians.
Wages For Climate Stewardship?, Sayd Randle
Wages For Climate Stewardship?, Sayd Randle
Research Collection College of Integrative Studies
IN 1996, environmental historian Richard White published an essay with a title borrowed from a pissed-off bumper sticker: “Are You an Environmentalist or Do You Work for a Living?” White used the frictions between loggers and spotted owl advocates in the Pacific Northwest to show readers exactly how US-based environmentalism had come to be seen as orthogonal to productive labor. “Work,” he asserted, is in fact “where we should begin” when we talk about environmentalism. Set aside idealized images of natural spaces as best suited for leisure, he counseled. It’s only “[i]n taking responsibility for our own lives and work, …