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Search News Feb 13 2018 Pride Tops Guilt as a Motivator for Environmental Decisions A lot of pro-environmental messages suggest that people will feel guilty if they don’t make an effort to live more sustainably or takes steps to… News Feb 13 2018 By 2100, Arid Cities Will Suffer from More Severe Heat Waves than Temperate Cities Heat waves are among the deadliest and most common of environmental extremes. As the earth continues to warm due to the buildup of greenhouse gases,… News Dec 13 2017 Hydraulic Fracturing Negatively Impacts Infant Health From North Dakota to Ohio to Pennsylvania, hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking, has transformed small towns into energy powerhouses. While… News Nov 29 2017 Frymer discusses ‘Building an American Empire’ Paul Frymer, a professor of politics at Princeton University and the director of the Program in Law and Public Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School… News Oct 30 2017 Are the Grandkids Worth It? Climate Change Policy Depends on How We Value Human Population If the human population continues to grow, more pressure will be put on carbon dioxide emissions — leaving future generations vulnerable to the… News Oct 23 2017 Air Pollution Cuts Solar Energy Potential in China China is rapidly expanding its solar power supply, hoping to meet 10 percent of the nation’s electricity needs with solar energy by 2030. But there’s… News Sep 15 2017 To Predict How Climate Change Will Affect Disease, Researchers Must Fuse Climate Science and Biology Predicting how climate change will affect the incidence of infectious diseases would have great public health benefits. But the relationship between… News Aug 22 2017 Orange is the New Green: How Orange Peels Revived a Costa Rican Forest In the mid-1990s, 1,000 truckloads of orange peels and orange pulp were purposefully unloaded onto a barren pasture in a Costa Rican national park… News Jun 29 2017 Climate Change to Damage U.S. Economy, Increase Inequality Unmitigated climate change will make the United States poorer and more unequal, according to a study published June 29 in the journal Science. The… News May 25 2017 U.S. Nuclear Regulators Greatly Underestimate Potential for Nuclear Disaster The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) relied on faulty analysis to justify its refusal to adopt a critical measure for protecting Americans… News May 18 2017 'A Bee, a Tree, What’s In It For Me?' Class Examines Environmental Policy On a morning in March, Professor Michael Oppenheimer pointed to a photograph he took while flying over the North Pole. News May 03 2017 Current Climate Change Measurements Mask Trade-Offs Necessary for Policy Debates Scientists and policymakers use measurements like global warming potential to compare how varying greenhouse gases, like carbon dioxide and methane,… News Apr 28 2017 Synthetic Gas Would Cut Air Pollution but Worsen Climate Damage in China Severe air pollution has plagued China's industrial regions in recent decades, a situation that has received worldwide attention thanks to photos of… News Mar 30 2017 Politics & Polls #37: On the Same Team? Trump’s Dynamics with Congress Shortly after the bill to replace the Affordable Care Act was pulled, President Trump called The Washington Post’s Robert Costa to discuss what… News Feb 21 2017 Baldwin Wins Student Paper Award from American Meteorological Society’s Board on Environment and Health Jane Baldwin, a Ph.D. candidate in Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences at Princeton University, has received a top student paper award from the American… News Feb 01 2017 Buchanan Wins Outstanding Student Paper Award from American Geophysical Union Maya Buchanan, a Ph.D. candidate at Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs concentrating in in Science,… News Jan 04 2017 The Fire Through the Smoke: Working for Transparency in Climate Projections The government of a low-lying island nation is considering the construction of a seawall to protect its capital and economic hub from the rising seas… News Dec 19 2016 Climate Policy Simulator Forces Users to Confront Ethics and Science Behind Policy Choices Responding to the challenges of climate change depends both on scientific assessment as well as value judgments by citizens, academics and… News Sep 20 2016 The Next Four Years: The Environment and Climate Change Issues related to the environment and climate change will demand the new president's attention soon after he or she takes office Jan. 20 and… News Sep 16 2016 International Panel on Social Progress Seeks Comments on Report The International Panel on Social Progress (IPSP), which brings together social scientists around the world to analyze social trends and spur debate… News Sep 07 2016 Seeing the Forest for the Trees: World's Largest Reforestation Program Overlooks Wildlife After years of environmental destruction, China has spent billions of dollars on the world's largest reforestation program, converting a combined… News Jun 27 2016 Household Fuels Exceed Power Plants and Cars as Source of Smog in Beijing Beijing and surrounding areas of China often suffer from choking smog. The Chinese government has made commitments to improve air quality and has… News May 04 2016 As Global Temperatures Rise, Children Must Be Central to Climate Change Debates Forecasts suggest that by 2050, the world could see 200 million environmental migrants, many of whom would be children. For this reason and others,… News Apr 29 2016 SINSI Spotlight: Wildlife Conservation on the Ground For Alexandra Kasdin ’14, MPA ’18, a passion for wildlife conservation began when she was eight years old. Inspired by her first grade teacher—who… News Apr 27 2016 Graduate Students Tackle Climate Change The 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference led to a historic agreement, in which 195 nations promised to reduce future greenhouse gas… Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹ Previous … Page 9 Page 10 Page 11 Page 12 Page 13 Page 14 Page 15 Current page 16 Page 17 Next page Next › Last page Last »