Not exact matches
Psychosocial stress, exposure to air pollution including truck traffic, sleep disruption and
changes to
socioeconomic status are all biologically plausible pathways for unconventional natural gas
development to affect health.
Losses from extreme floods in Europe could more than double by 2050, because of climate
change and
socioeconomic development.
Development challenges, such as gender inequality and low levels of education, and other differences among communities in age, race and ethnicity,
socioeconomic status, and governance can influence vulnerability to climate
change impacts in complex ways.
The first point to dispense with is the reference to Sections 3.2.2.7 and 3.6.4 in support of the claim that «the locations of greatest
socioeconomic development are also those that have been most warmed by atmospheric circulation
changes.»
This article is part of the Special Issue on «A Framework for the
Development of New
Socioeconomic Scenarios for Climate
Change Research» edited by Nebojsa Nakicenovic, Robert Lempert, and Anthony Janetos.
The relationship between resilience in the face of extreme weather events and increases in female education expenditure holds when
socioeconomic development continues but the climate does not
change, and
socioeconomic development continues with weather paths driven by «wet» and «dry» Global Climate Models.
Adaptation for a High - Energy Planet highlights successful adaptations, connects them to robust
socioeconomic development efforts, and explores what they mean for helping communities to thrive in an ever -
changing world.
Future climate
change impacts will depend on past and future
socioeconomic development, which influences emissions of heat - trapping gases, the exposure and vulnerability of society and ecosystems, and societal capacity to respond.
Socioeconomic development, natural climate variations, and human - caused climate
change have an influence on climate - and weather - related disaster risk.
Changes in population, age, income, technology, relative prices, lifestyle, regulation, governance, and many other aspects of
socioeconomic development will have an impact on the supply and demand of economic goods and services that is large relative to the impact of climate
change.
We controlled for a wide range of potential confounders: characteristics of the child (temperament and
development at 9 months, and illness and exact age at outcome), equivalent mother involvement where appropriate, and factors related to
socioeconomic status, household
change, and parental well - being, where statistically significant.