June 2, 1999 Library Presentation |
Contents:
Summary
Online Transcript
Download Transcript (MS Word File)
About Roger Pielke
Societal Aspects of Weather
WeatherZine
HURRICANES: Their Nature and Impact on Society (Book Review)
Waiting for Hurricane X (TIME Magazine Article)
Hurricanes and Societal Impacts: Are We Prepared? (Science Now Article)
Dr. Gray's Forecast
SUMMARYEIIP Virtual Library Online Presentation Hurricane Season 1999 Roger Pielke, Jr EIIP Moderator: Amy Sebring
The session primarily focused on (1) Hurricane Impacts, (2) Hurricane Forecasts, and (3) Hurricane Policies. Pielke expanded on each of the three areas with statistics, graphs, and URLs to demonstrate research findings about reasons for increased hurricane losses, both human and financial, and predictions for the future. |
ROGER A. PIELKE, JR.
Roger A. Pielke, Jr. is a Scientist at the Environmental and Societal Impacts Group at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. He also holds an affiliate professorship in the Department of Political Science at the University of Colorado. With a B.A.in mathematics and a Ph.D. in political science from the University of Colorado, his research focuses on the relation of scientific information and public and private sector decision making. His current areas of research are societal responses to extreme weather events, domestic and international policy responses to climate change, and United States science policy. He currently chairs the American Meteorological Societys Committee on Societal Impacts, and serves on the Science Steering Committees of the U.S. Weather Research Programs and the World Meteorological Organization's World Weather Research Programme among other advisory committees. He is a co-author (with his father) of Hurricanes: Their Nature and Impact on Society, published in 1997 by John Wiley & Sons Press. Related Publications: Pielke, Jr., R. A., B. Enosh, A. Gutierrez, and M. Mercer 1999. Extreme Weather Sourcebook: An Educational Report on Damages in the United States Related to Tornadoes, Floods and Hurricanes , Environmental and Societal Impacts Group National Center For Atmospheric Research, February. http://www.dir.ucar.edu/esig/HP_roger/sourcebook/report.html Pielke, Jr., R. A. and C. W. Landsea, (in press). La Niña, El Niño, and Atlantic Hurricane Landsea, C. L., R. A. Pielke, Jr., A. Mestas-Nuñez, and J. Knaff, 1999. (in press). Atlantic Basin Hurricanes: Indicies of Climate Changes, Climate Change. Pielke, Jr., R. A. and C. W. Landsea 1998. Normalized Hurricane Damages in the United Pielke Jr., R. A. 1997. "Reframing the U.S. Hurricane Problem," Society and Natural Resources 10:485-499. Pielke, Jr., R. A. 1996. "Exposing Exposure: Societal Dimensions of Hurricane Risk," Pielke Jr., R. A. 1995. "Preparing for the Past: Global Warming and Responses to Hurricanes in the U.S.," Insurance Specialist, 1(7):15-16. * * * * |