Adapt or die: the science, politics and economics of climate change
Abstract
have stated that part of the vision
behind the Kyoto Protocol 1997 portends
for developing countries in the 21st century
what apartheid bore for South Africa
in the zo" Century. The threats to humanity
that come with an increase in global
temperatures include rising sea levels,
changes in agricultural production, severe
weather events such as hurricanes, the
spread of diseases such as malaria and
environmental effects such as the loss of
biodiversity. Environmentalists have used
these eventualities as justification to advocate
for the reduction of global trade,
consumption of vital resources such as energy,
and most dramatically, suggesting
that third world countries should not pursue
the same course of development as
the developed countries. The suggested
alternative is alleged to be environmentally
friendly yet more expensive. All
these are being pursued under the Kyoto
Protocol. The Protocol, said to be the 'insurance
policy' for humanity, has been
largely driven by the assumption that the
impacts of global warming, if unmitigated,
will pose threats to humanity and
to the environment.
Citation
The East African Law Journal Vol 1 2004Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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