The Climate Web is a knowledge solution for understanding and tackling climate change, and is built with TheBrain knowledge management software.
If this topical doorway is your first exposure to the Climate Web*, you might want to take a look at one of these introductions:
Note: Right-clicking on links like those above will keep this page open in your browser so you can easily come back to it.
The doorway below uses active links to let you explore the breadth and depth of topical coverage in the Climate Web. Right clicking on links opens the Climate Web to that exact spot (each thought in the Climate Web has its own URL). Links open into the on-line version of the Climate Web, and allow you to see the range of curated topical resources available to you. Note that the on-line version of TheBrain software doesn’t do a good job of demonstrating the power, the speed, and the ease of use of the software, and this carries through to applications like the Climate Web. We’ll discuss below the ways you can leverage the knowledge curation available in the Climate Web, while avoiding the limitations.
Societal Risk Doorway
The prospect that human-induced climate change might pose a societal risk within relevant decision-making timeframes was first raised in a scientific paper in 1957, and was the topic of its first Presidential briefing in 1965. Since then climate change is generally perceived to have arrived, and the level of concern regarding future climate change has increased dramatically.
Note that this Doorway overlaps with several other relevant Doorways:
Timely Questions
There are still big questions when it comes to assessing the societal risks of climate change. The list below is by no means intended to be comprehensive. Our goal is primarily to flag the range of topics and questions currently in play, and to perhaps raise some questions that users might not have considered, but that might contribute to finding actionable knowledge.
- What are the known knowns, known unknowns, and unknown unknowns of climate change?
- How should we distinguish between societal and business risks?
- What’s the relationship between climate uncertainties and risk?
- What’s the right time-frame for thinking about societal climate risks?
- How does “expected climate change” differ from the “long tail” of climate change outcomes and climate risks?
- How much climate risk might we be failing to recognize?
- Is “unacceptable risk” a better framing than “worst-case” climate risk?
- Is systemic climate the societal risk elephant in the room?
- How do adaptation limits play into societal climate risk?
Timely Resources
Included here are links to a small subset of resources specific to this Doorway. Right-clicking on the links will usually go directly to the on-line story, bypassing the Climate Web itself (although that’s where they’re all organized). Note that what’s listed here represents just the smallest sliver of the topical information organized in the Climate Web. If the stories seem a bit dated, we apologize. We’re constantly trying to update these Doorways, but we do fall behind. Feel free to send us a note through the contact form at right requesting an update!
- 2021/5 One-third of global food production at risk: Rising greenhouse emissions could push world to starvation
- 2021/4 One Bank Warns Soaring Food Prices Will Lead To Social Unrest
- 2021/4 Pentagon chief: Climate crisis 'existential' threat to US national security
- 2021/4 Action Team Leads DOD Efforts to Adapt to Climate Change Effects
- 2021/1 Congress Continues to Affirm that Climate Security is National Security
- 2021/5 UK climate activist arrested after attacks on HSBC and Barclays
- 2021/5 Power Failures During Heat Waves
- 2021/4 Sea-level rise could submerge fiber optic cables, a key component of internet infrastructure
- 2021/7 The climate crisis will create two classes: those who can flee, and those who cannot
- 2021/2 It's 2032. We're at COP37, and the year we cross 1.5°C of warming. What happens next?
- 2021/1 In the Marshall Islands, climate change is already influencing decisions to move
Topical Doorway into Climate Web
The goal of the links organized below is to illustrate how topical information is organized in the Climate Web. If you’re looking for a much better developed story-line relating to this topic, that literally walks you through the key issues, points to relevant sources and other materials, consider the Premium Roadmaps discussed later on this page.
We’ll start with the highest level of information organization in the Climate Web, and work our way down to more granular knowledge curation (which may be what you’re ultimately most interested in). We think it’s worthwhile understanding how information has been curated in the Climate Web, even if you’re ultimately focused on a specific question.
The highest level or organization in the Climate Web is Index Entries (of which there are more than 3,000). Index Entries are Topical Doorways in their own right, linking you both to other relevant Index Entries, and to curated information. Index Entries specifical to this Topical Doorway include:
- I:SocietalClimateRisk
- I:SystemicClimateRisk (Deep Dive)
- I:SocialCollapse
- I:DangerousClimateChange (Deep Dive)
- I:UnderEstimatedClimateRisk
- I:ExtinctionRebellion
- I:UnacceptableClimateChange
Sources Headings organize books, reports, and journal articles. The Climatographers are constantly extracting useful graphics, ideas, and more from these sources, and organizing them under Extracted Materials headings (see below).
- S - Climate Change Systemic Risk
- S - Assessments of Societal Climate Risks
- S - Climate Risk (Societal)
- S - Dangerous Climate Impacts
- S - Worst Case Climate Change
News and Opinion Headings organize news stories and blogs, often allowing you to scan the evolution of a topic over the last 5-10 years just by scanning the headlines. Note that with local access to the Climate Web all you have to do is hover your mouse over a specific story to have it open instantly on your screen.
Extracted Materials Headings organize the ideas, graphics, and more that we’ve individually extracted from sources. Individual thoughts are always physically linked back to their source, allowing you to easily follow an idea or graphic back to the report or article it came from, which in turn lets you explore other extracted materials, or click through to the larger Sources Heading.
Networking Topical Headings organize websites, experts, and more:
Video Topical Headings organize videos.
COMING SOON
Topical Dashboards pull everything else together to help users come rapidly up to speed on a particular topic. Just a few Dashboards are pointed to below, and more are being added all the time. Note that the contents of Dashboards changes on an ongoing basis as new materials are added. Dashboards can deliver all kinds of information, as explored here. Note that while you can get an overview of Dashboards in the on-line Climate Web, they are confusing to actually use in the on-line version of the software.
COMING SOON
Pre-Set Search Strings
Pre-set search strings are intended to help you explore the latest information on a topic, and to stay current with relevant sub-topics. Topical pre-set search strings in the Climate Web can include: Twitter Hashtag Searches, Google Searches, Google Scholar Searches, Google Image Searches, YouTube Searches, Vimeo Searches, Quora.com Searches, Reddit Searches, DeepDyve Searches (professional journals). They’re a great way to supplement the curated knowledge in the Climate Web. You can see how pre-set search terms work in this 1 minute video
Here are some of the pre-set search strings the Climatographers have found to be relevant to this Topical Doorway. Unfortunately, you can’t tell exactly where the search is going from the links below, even though it’s obvious if you’re accessing these search terms in the Climate Web itself. In fact, all you have to do is hover your mouse over a search string to have it automatically execute on your screen. They’re a bit time saver.
- long tail risk
- long tail climate risk - images
- Long tail
- Tail risk
- #longtailrisk
- fat tail climate risk
- long tail climate risk
- long tail climate risk
- long tail risk
- long tail risk example
- long tail climate risk
- long tail risk
- long tail risk and climate change
- long tail risk
Accessing the Climate Web
This Topical Doorway has pointed you to a lot of topical resources. Since the Climate Web is open-access on-line, you’re free to explore these resources there. But as discussed above, on-line access is not an efficient way to leverage the Climate Web. The desktop and mobile versions are much more flexible, powerful and at least 500% faster when it comses to exploring the Climate Web (a function of TheBrain software itself).
If you want to take advantage of the Climate Web we strongly recommend taking advantage of the ability to download it, whether through our Your Climate Brain or Premium Access. You’ll be surprised at how cost-effective we’ve made these options as a way to leverage thousands of hours climate knowledge curation, but if they are still financially out of reach please contact us through the contact form at right to explore a free license.
Premium Topical Roadmaps are also an option for exploring topics in more depth, and they can be used even in the on-line version of the Climate Web. Representing hundreds of hours of research and knowledge curation, Premium Roadmaps link together together explanatory materials, topical headings, individual reports, news stories, videos, websites, and curated topical dashboards to explore a topic in depth, even including links to individual ideas and graphics extracted from a wide range of key sources.
Premium Roadmaps tell the story of a topic in far more detail than a Topical Doorway like this one. To clearly see the differences between a Topical Doorway and a Premium Topical Roadmap, you can take a look at both versions for “Under-Estimating Climate Risks:”
Another option you have to access topical knowledge in the Climate Web is to work directly with the Climatographers. We can deliver uniquely cost-effective customized briefings, webinars, E-courses, and more for utilizing the topical knowledge curated in the Climate Web To learn more about topical briefings, for example, take a look at our Climate Briefings page.
Want to see what other Doorways are currently available? Click here!
To learn more about how the Climate Web is structured and its capabilities, click here!
Want to leverage the Climate Web into a fit-for-service knowledge management solution for your organization? Contact the Climatographers!
If you haven’t already done so, sign up for our Climate Web Newsletter!