"What interviews with flood, wildfire, and drought survivors can teach us about how to live amid the threat of climate change
KerryAnn Laufer returned home days after the 2019 Kincade Fire in
California to find only her fireplace still standing, while Dave Mackey
saw nearly every house in his neighborhood on Grand Bahama island washed
away, pummeled by raging waters and 200-mile-per-hour winds from
Hurricane Dorian.
#California, #firestorms, #wildfire, Australia, cyclones, floods, Green New Deal, hurricanes,
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Extreme heat kills
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Ronnie Scott lost his wife when she tried to to rescue their dog and cat from floodwaters in West Virginia in 2016. Carole Duncan almost lost her 83-year-old father during Australia’s massive 2019 bushfires, the firefighters finding him just in time.
KerryAnn Laufer returned home days after the 2019 Kincade Fire in
California to find only her fireplace still standing, while Dave Mackey
saw nearly every house in his neighborhood on Grand Bahama island washed
away, pummeled by raging waters and 200-mile-per-hour winds from
Hurricane Dorian.
Storms,
wildfires, and other such disasters are getting more common and intense
as climate change accelerates. Scott, Duncan, Laufer, and Mackey, who
survived these extreme weather events, are among the lucky ones. But
each of them found themselves changed by the experience.
What
would you do if your house burned down or your neighborhood washed away
in a flood? How would you respond if a cataclysmic weather event killed
someone you love or forced you to abandon, perhaps forever, the place
you call home? And how would it change the way you think about the
world?
These questions are at the heart of a new
“Voices from the Future”
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Green new deal is cheap actually
interview series a small group of journalist,
researchers, and I have developed at the Julie Ann Wrigley Global
Futures Laboratory at Arizona State University. We have collected the
stories and insights of nearly three dozen survivors on five continents,
eight of which will be published in these pages over the next few
weeks."
Original story
Steven Beschloss is a professor of practice at
the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication and
directs the Narrative Storytelling Initiative at Arizona State
University. He has written for The New Yorker and The Washington Post, among other publications.
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