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The past year, 2023, has been so far the hottest on track, and, sure enough, it won’t keep this record long. We have already reached almost 1.5 C° above the preindustrial average, and the recent first Global Stocktake carried out at COP 28, which was held in Dubai last December (2023), revealed that we still need to enhance dramatically the efforts at the international level to meet Paris Agreement’s goals. The impacts of climate change, along with other forms of anthropic pressures, not only involve devastating consequences for ecosystems, biodiversity and the resilience of the socio-ecological systems we live in, but, as it is emerging from the latest trends in scientific research, it poses under serious threat also public health and well-being.
This book is a guide to the research, findings, and discussions of US and international experts on climate change and respiratory health. Since the publication of the first edition, climate change has been increasingly acknowledged as being directly related to the prevalence and incidence of respiratory morbidity. Evidence is increasing that climate change does drive respiratory disease onset and exacerbation as a result of increased ambient and indoor air pollution, desertification, heat stress, wildfires, and the geographic and temporal spread of pollens, molds and infectious agents. This second edition is fully updated to include the latest research by international experts on topics such...
Reprint of the original, first published in 1877.
While climate change has been described as the greatest threat to health in the 21st century, with the potential to reverse 50 years of health gains, we are currently facing a triple planetary crisis. In addition to a changing climate, rising land and ocean temperatures are changing weather patterns, resulting in wildfires, floods and melting polar regions - the latter leading to rising sea levels. Through our largely unsustainable activities, pollution in all of its forms (air, heavy metals, microplastics, ‘forever chemicals’, etc.) is impacting not only humans but also other planetary ‘beings’. As a result of climate change and pollution, our declining ecosystem health is leading t...
Ironic, playful, and multilayered, winner of three major prizes for the best Yugoslav novel of 1988, this beguiling novel-about-a-novel is set at an international literary conference in Zagreb. It begins with the death of an anti-Franco poet who slips into the pool of the intercontinental Hotel and continues with a rapid and entertaining chain of events involving espionage, sexual intrigue, murder, and a good deal of one-upmanship among the assembled academics. In the style of David Lodge, the novel is filled with colorful characters and hilarious scenes; but amid the lighthearted action Ugresic provides a serious and doubly outsidered perspective on the differences between the worlds of Eas...
Engendering Slavic Literatures breaks new ground in its investigation of gender and feminist issues in Croatian, Polish, Russian, Serbian, and Ukrainian literary texts by both female and male writers. Drawing on psychoanalytic approaches, film theory, and lesbian and gender theory, the authors interrogate the received notions of Western gender studies to see which can be usefully applied to nineteenth- and twentieth-century Slavic literary works. Motherhood and the relationships of mothers and daughters; the myths of selfhood that shape the autobiographies of Nadezhda Mandel'shtam, Marina Tsvetaeva, Lidiia Ginzburg, and Lev Tolstoy; Polish Catholicism and sexuality; portrayals of landscape in verbal and visual art; and women writers' transgressive ventures into male bastions such as the love lyric and prose fiction are among the themes of this important and innovative volume.
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