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Bangladesh Confronts Climate Change
Living in a low-lying and densely populated country on the front line of climate change, Bangladeshis are taking a lead in adapting to rising temperatures and campaigning to limit climate change. Global warming will worsen this country's existing environmental problems – causing a rise in sea level, more flooding and stronger, more damaging cyclones. Bangladeshis know what is coming, and how to respond, because they are already effectively combating environmental and social challenges. Cyclone shelters and warning systems have cut the fatality rate dramatically; new varieties of rice have raised nutrition levels; women's education has slowed population growth; land is being raised to respond to sea level rise. Bangladeshis will keep their heads above water, but at huge costs. Will the industrialised countries curb their greenhouse gas emissions and pay for the damage they have already done?
- Cover
- Half Title
- Series Information
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of contents
- List of illustrations
- Abbreviations, Acronyms and Bangladeshi Terms
- Acknowledgements
- About the Authors
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Chapter One Actors, not Victims
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Shaped by Geography and Politics
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Bangladesh as ‘Basket Case’
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Bangladesh as a Development Success Story
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What Is the Risk?
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Chapter Two How Will Climate Change Hit Bangladesh?
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Global Climate Change
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Climate Change and Bangladesh
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Three Targets and Four Scenarios
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Small Differences Have a Big Impact
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Looking More Closely at Bangladesh
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Conclusion: More of the Same … but How Much More?
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Chapter Three Taking the Lead in Negotiations – and Moving Forward
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Making an International Mark
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Changing Governments Mean Changing Approaches
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Low-Profile Leadership on Loss and Damage
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Baby Steps When Giant Strides Are Needed
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Conclusion: Bangladesh in the Lead, but Can Small Victories Halt the Rising Sea?
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Chapter Four Sea Level Rise and the Vulnerable Coast – Where Farmers Know More than Engineers
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River and Coastal Zones Are Very Different
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The US, Krug, Pakistan and the Engineering Years
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Misunderstanding Sediment Flows
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Changes over Time
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Community Action to Develop Tidal River Management
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Tidal River Management
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The Kalishakul Protest Shows Much Remains to Be Done
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Compensation
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Cyclones and Storm Surges
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Conclusion: Raising the Land to Meet Rising Seas
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Chapter Five Saving Lives With Cyclone Shelters
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Shelters
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Cyclone Warnings
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Risk Reduction
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Conclusion: Home-Grown Successes
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Chapter Six Living With Floods
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Floods and Responses
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Engineering Answers
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Faulty Justification
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Flood Proofing
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Learning and Innovation
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Conclusion: Adapting to Floods
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Chapter Seven Agronomists Keeping Ahead of Climate Change
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After Boro
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Using Less Water
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Conclusion: Rice OK until 2050, at Least
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Chapter Eight No Climate Change Migrants – Yet
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Environmental Migrants
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International Migration
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Conclusion: Will Climate Change Create Refugees?
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Chapter Nine How Can the Privatized Megacity Cope With Climate Change?
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The Politics That Create the Least ‘Liveable’ City
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Smaller Cities
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Dhaka and the Mastaans
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Rivers and Floods
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A Flood-Prone Megacity
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Conclusion: Can Adequate Action Be Taken?
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Chapter Ten Is Climate Change Only a Problem For the Urban Poor?
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Informal or Slum?
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NGOs Fill the Gap
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No Return to the Countryside
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The Changing Slums
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Building Better Housing for the Poor
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Conclusion: Dhaka Is Third Most Vulnerable City
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Chapter Eleven Power – Political, Financial and Electrical
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Government Corruption and NGO Misconduct
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Donor Myths and Reality
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Greenhouse Gases
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Conclusion: Contradictory Goals
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Chapter Twelve Bangladesh on the Front Line of Climate Change
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How High Will the Temperature Rise?
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The Unlivable Cities
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The Climate Continuum
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Keeping Our Heads above Water
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- Index
- 出版地 : 英國
- 語言 : 英文
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