Jeff Goodell The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on a Scorched Planet Little Brown and Company, 2023, 400 p., $29.00

IF 4.6 2区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY
Risto Conte Keivabu
{"title":"Jeff Goodell The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on a Scorched Planet Little Brown and Company, 2023, 400 p., $29.00","authors":"Risto Conte Keivabu","doi":"10.1111/padr.12598","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>In 2023, the Earth experienced unprecedented high temperatures and endured the hottest summer documented since 1880. The extreme temperatures coincided with the publication of Jeff Goodell's <i>The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on a Scorched Planet</i>. The book is essential and accessible reading on the dangers presented by heat for human populations, a guide to the actions needed to reduce these risks, and an inspiration for further research into the implications of global warming.</p>\n<p>Goodell is a renowned climate journalist who has written extensively on the topic of climate change, including earlier books on the coal mining industry, climate mitigation, geoengineering, and rising sea levels. In <i>The Heat Will Kill You First</i>, Goodell turns his attention to heat waves, aiming to “convince you to think about heat in a different way” (p. 19). Goodell begins by describing how heat is “invisible” compared with other environmental disasters such as floods, hurricanes, and earthquakes. Those events are sudden and traumatizing and leave a durable mark on the territory and community. While other natural disasters are given names—to support documentation, social memory, and record-keeping—heat waves are unnamed and are sometimes even seen positively, as holiday weather. Despite its relative invisibility compared with other disasters, heat is responsible for the highest yearly death toll attributable to an environmental disaster in some countries. The human thermoregulatory system can fail when exposed to high temperatures for a prolonged time, leading to hyperthermia, heatstroke, and death. Through multiple real-life examples, Goodell shows how heat is a pervasive force that infiltrates homes, exploits vulnerabilities, and proves especially detrimental for those unable to shield themselves.</p>\n<p>Goodell pays particular attention to how the impact of heat waves exacerbates social inequalities. For instance, the coexistence of medical conditions such as cardiorespiratory disease or diabetes reduces peoples’ ability to thermoregulate during heat waves. The prevalence of such conditions is a major factor explaining the higher death toll caused by extreme heat in older adults. Goodell shows that age is not the only factor determining increased health risks during a heat wave. For people at younger ages, heat waves remain a major health threat, in particular for those who downplay its risks and do not take precautions, and for those who cannot afford air conditioning or insulation. Socioeconomic status and employment conditions affect the risks posed to individuals by a heat wave. For example, Goodell describes the high exposure of agricultural workers to heat waves and the necessity of adaptation measures to avoid fatalities. Such measures vary in their accessibility or availability creating inequalities in this sector.</p>\n<p>Goodell dedicates ample space to the subject of adaptation to heat and the limits of such measures. One informative chapter revolves around the invention and widespread adoption of air conditioning, especially in the United States. Air conditioning provides relief from scorching temperatures to individuals who can afford it, which potentially amplifies inequalities in health and mortality in warmer regions. Furthermore, air conditioning is not a complete solution. During prolonged heat spells and widespread use of air conditioning, electric grid lines are put under high stress and in case of failure could paralyze entire cities.</p>\n<p>Other adaptive measures Goodell discusses in the book relate to the challenges faced by cities in an ever more urbanized and hotter world. The formation of urban heat islands puts cities at risk, exacerbating urban–rural inequalities in health. Urban heat islands result from reduced heat release in cities due to factors like limited vegetation, nonreflective surfaces, urban canyon effects, and human activities, making them warmer than rural areas that host more green spaces and water bodies. Some of the solutions discussed in the book relate to urban greening and white rooftop painting but Goodell describes how these innovations face several hurdles. Urban greening could be effective in providing shade and reducing heat islands but challenging in dry and hot regions with limited access to water. Roof painting may not be suitable in historical centers where architectural features of buildings cannot be changed easily.</p>\n<p>Migration patterns, too, are heavily influenced by temperature anomalies. Goodell describes a paradoxical phenomenon relating to the increased internal migration in the United States of individuals into areas classified as having a higher climatic risk. In particular, several areas in the South that are badly affected by heat waves and sea level rise experience larger population growth as people retire to warmer climes. The combination of rising population and escalating climatic risks may pose significant challenges for these areas in the future. Conversely, for the economically disadvantaged who increasingly suffer the consequences of climate change, migration is often the ultimate solution to escape inhospitable climatic conditions that render certain economic activities such as agriculture unfeasible. At the same time, migratory paths are becoming increasingly perilous and impractical due to worsening weather conditions.</p>\n<p>Goodell's book covers three principal themes relating to heat and humanity that have been of particular concern for population scholars: the increasing prevalence of heat waves and their broad impacts on population outcomes; the importance and complexity of adaptation measures; and the amplification of existing sociodemographic inequalities due to climate-induced challenges. In recent years, academic research on the implications of heat waves has intensified. A recent study marked the catastrophic European heat wave of 2003, responsible for approximately 70,000 deaths, as a significant inflection point leading to an increase in studies on temperature-related mortality and morbidity (Campbell et al., <span>2018</span>). In 2022, heat waves determined about 60,000 deaths in Europe indicating that the impact of heat waves remains deadly, raising concerns about the ability of individuals to adapt to rising temperatures (Ballester et al., <span>2023</span>). The increasing prevalence of heat waves makes studies on the population implications of climate change particularly pressing.</p>\n<p>Goodell provides novel perspectives to population scholars, delving into relatively unexplored topics in existing demographic research. He highlights how climate change can create environments that favor the spread of disease vectors, such as mosquitoes and ticks. This may result in a wider distribution of diseases like dengue, Lyme disease, and malaria, determining new challenges to public health and human mortality. Additionally, an important area of research highlighted in the book is climate change attribution which seeks to understand whether specific environmental disasters arise from natural climatic variations or are determined by human activities and greenhouse gas emissions. More research is needed on this topic, to complement existing studies calculating the mortality cost of carbon (number of deaths caused by CO<sub>2</sub> emissions) (Bressler, <span>2021</span>) and estimating the burden of heat-related mortality determined by human-led climate change (Vicedo-Cabrera et al., <span>2021</span>). Further studies on the demographic and health cost of anthropogenic climate change are essential as well as on the potential of mitigation to limit such impacts.</p>\n<p>While Goodell's book discusses the effects of heat on migration, mortality, and morbidity, it does not delve so deeply into its impact on fertility, perinatal, and maternal health. Compared with mortality, research on the impact of heat on such outcomes has been more limited. Despite some recent interest in the impact of heat on fertility and birth outcomes, there remain many unresolved questions on this topic (Barreca et al., <span>2018</span>; Chersich et al., <span>2020</span>; Hajdu &amp; Hajdu, <span>2022</span>). The mechanisms linking temperature with fertility are still debated and are critical to comprehending how heat shapes reproductive health and behavior in a world with low fertility rates and an aging population. The book could also have delved deeper into the compounding impact on public health and demographic dynamics when multiple environmental disasters simultaneously impact a population. Such compound effects are especially pronounced in regions where heat waves occur simultaneously with wildfires or flooding events, potentially amplifying the impact on public health outcomes.</p>\n<p>This public science book reads effortlessly and is written in a journalistic style, combining scientific evidence with the lived experiences of individuals suffering the negative consequences of heat. Each chapter reads as a standalone story that covers in depth how heat affects a particular aspect of life, ranging from agricultural work and the spread of vector-borne diseases to survival in boiling cities and the invention of air conditioning, making the text an easy reference volume. Consequently, it offers an insightful read both for the general public and the expert reader, underlining the pressing challenges determined by heat for human life on Earth. As reflected in the book's provoking title, the pervasive effects of heat will inevitably touch us all, compelling us to grapple with its implications.</p>","PeriodicalId":51372,"journal":{"name":"Population and Development Review","volume":" 631","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":4.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Population and Development Review","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1111/padr.12598","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"DEMOGRAPHY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

In 2023, the Earth experienced unprecedented high temperatures and endured the hottest summer documented since 1880. The extreme temperatures coincided with the publication of Jeff Goodell's The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on a Scorched Planet. The book is essential and accessible reading on the dangers presented by heat for human populations, a guide to the actions needed to reduce these risks, and an inspiration for further research into the implications of global warming.

Goodell is a renowned climate journalist who has written extensively on the topic of climate change, including earlier books on the coal mining industry, climate mitigation, geoengineering, and rising sea levels. In The Heat Will Kill You First, Goodell turns his attention to heat waves, aiming to “convince you to think about heat in a different way” (p. 19). Goodell begins by describing how heat is “invisible” compared with other environmental disasters such as floods, hurricanes, and earthquakes. Those events are sudden and traumatizing and leave a durable mark on the territory and community. While other natural disasters are given names—to support documentation, social memory, and record-keeping—heat waves are unnamed and are sometimes even seen positively, as holiday weather. Despite its relative invisibility compared with other disasters, heat is responsible for the highest yearly death toll attributable to an environmental disaster in some countries. The human thermoregulatory system can fail when exposed to high temperatures for a prolonged time, leading to hyperthermia, heatstroke, and death. Through multiple real-life examples, Goodell shows how heat is a pervasive force that infiltrates homes, exploits vulnerabilities, and proves especially detrimental for those unable to shield themselves.

Goodell pays particular attention to how the impact of heat waves exacerbates social inequalities. For instance, the coexistence of medical conditions such as cardiorespiratory disease or diabetes reduces peoples’ ability to thermoregulate during heat waves. The prevalence of such conditions is a major factor explaining the higher death toll caused by extreme heat in older adults. Goodell shows that age is not the only factor determining increased health risks during a heat wave. For people at younger ages, heat waves remain a major health threat, in particular for those who downplay its risks and do not take precautions, and for those who cannot afford air conditioning or insulation. Socioeconomic status and employment conditions affect the risks posed to individuals by a heat wave. For example, Goodell describes the high exposure of agricultural workers to heat waves and the necessity of adaptation measures to avoid fatalities. Such measures vary in their accessibility or availability creating inequalities in this sector.

Goodell dedicates ample space to the subject of adaptation to heat and the limits of such measures. One informative chapter revolves around the invention and widespread adoption of air conditioning, especially in the United States. Air conditioning provides relief from scorching temperatures to individuals who can afford it, which potentially amplifies inequalities in health and mortality in warmer regions. Furthermore, air conditioning is not a complete solution. During prolonged heat spells and widespread use of air conditioning, electric grid lines are put under high stress and in case of failure could paralyze entire cities.

Other adaptive measures Goodell discusses in the book relate to the challenges faced by cities in an ever more urbanized and hotter world. The formation of urban heat islands puts cities at risk, exacerbating urban–rural inequalities in health. Urban heat islands result from reduced heat release in cities due to factors like limited vegetation, nonreflective surfaces, urban canyon effects, and human activities, making them warmer than rural areas that host more green spaces and water bodies. Some of the solutions discussed in the book relate to urban greening and white rooftop painting but Goodell describes how these innovations face several hurdles. Urban greening could be effective in providing shade and reducing heat islands but challenging in dry and hot regions with limited access to water. Roof painting may not be suitable in historical centers where architectural features of buildings cannot be changed easily.

Migration patterns, too, are heavily influenced by temperature anomalies. Goodell describes a paradoxical phenomenon relating to the increased internal migration in the United States of individuals into areas classified as having a higher climatic risk. In particular, several areas in the South that are badly affected by heat waves and sea level rise experience larger population growth as people retire to warmer climes. The combination of rising population and escalating climatic risks may pose significant challenges for these areas in the future. Conversely, for the economically disadvantaged who increasingly suffer the consequences of climate change, migration is often the ultimate solution to escape inhospitable climatic conditions that render certain economic activities such as agriculture unfeasible. At the same time, migratory paths are becoming increasingly perilous and impractical due to worsening weather conditions.

Goodell's book covers three principal themes relating to heat and humanity that have been of particular concern for population scholars: the increasing prevalence of heat waves and their broad impacts on population outcomes; the importance and complexity of adaptation measures; and the amplification of existing sociodemographic inequalities due to climate-induced challenges. In recent years, academic research on the implications of heat waves has intensified. A recent study marked the catastrophic European heat wave of 2003, responsible for approximately 70,000 deaths, as a significant inflection point leading to an increase in studies on temperature-related mortality and morbidity (Campbell et al., 2018). In 2022, heat waves determined about 60,000 deaths in Europe indicating that the impact of heat waves remains deadly, raising concerns about the ability of individuals to adapt to rising temperatures (Ballester et al., 2023). The increasing prevalence of heat waves makes studies on the population implications of climate change particularly pressing.

Goodell provides novel perspectives to population scholars, delving into relatively unexplored topics in existing demographic research. He highlights how climate change can create environments that favor the spread of disease vectors, such as mosquitoes and ticks. This may result in a wider distribution of diseases like dengue, Lyme disease, and malaria, determining new challenges to public health and human mortality. Additionally, an important area of research highlighted in the book is climate change attribution which seeks to understand whether specific environmental disasters arise from natural climatic variations or are determined by human activities and greenhouse gas emissions. More research is needed on this topic, to complement existing studies calculating the mortality cost of carbon (number of deaths caused by CO2 emissions) (Bressler, 2021) and estimating the burden of heat-related mortality determined by human-led climate change (Vicedo-Cabrera et al., 2021). Further studies on the demographic and health cost of anthropogenic climate change are essential as well as on the potential of mitigation to limit such impacts.

While Goodell's book discusses the effects of heat on migration, mortality, and morbidity, it does not delve so deeply into its impact on fertility, perinatal, and maternal health. Compared with mortality, research on the impact of heat on such outcomes has been more limited. Despite some recent interest in the impact of heat on fertility and birth outcomes, there remain many unresolved questions on this topic (Barreca et al., 2018; Chersich et al., 2020; Hajdu & Hajdu, 2022). The mechanisms linking temperature with fertility are still debated and are critical to comprehending how heat shapes reproductive health and behavior in a world with low fertility rates and an aging population. The book could also have delved deeper into the compounding impact on public health and demographic dynamics when multiple environmental disasters simultaneously impact a population. Such compound effects are especially pronounced in regions where heat waves occur simultaneously with wildfires or flooding events, potentially amplifying the impact on public health outcomes.

This public science book reads effortlessly and is written in a journalistic style, combining scientific evidence with the lived experiences of individuals suffering the negative consequences of heat. Each chapter reads as a standalone story that covers in depth how heat affects a particular aspect of life, ranging from agricultural work and the spread of vector-borne diseases to survival in boiling cities and the invention of air conditioning, making the text an easy reference volume. Consequently, it offers an insightful read both for the general public and the expert reader, underlining the pressing challenges determined by heat for human life on Earth. As reflected in the book's provoking title, the pervasive effects of heat will inevitably touch us all, compelling us to grapple with its implications.

杰夫·古德尔:《高温会先杀死你:焦化星球上的生与死》,利特布朗出版社,2023年,400便士,29.00美元
2023年,地球经历了前所未有的高温,经历了自1880年以来最热的夏天。极端气温恰逢杰夫·古德尔的《高温首先会杀死你:焦化星球上的生与死》出版。这本书是关于热量给人类带来的危险的基本和易于理解的读物,是减少这些风险所需行动的指南,并为进一步研究全球变暖的影响提供了灵感。古德尔是一位著名的气候记者,他撰写了大量关于气候变化的文章,包括早期关于煤炭采矿业、气候减缓、地球工程和海平面上升的书籍。在《高温会先杀死你》一书中,古德尔将注意力转向热浪,旨在“说服你以不同的方式思考高温”(第19页)。古德尔首先描述了与洪水、飓风和地震等其他环境灾害相比,高温是如何“看不见”的。这些事件是突然的,创伤性的,在领土和社区留下了持久的印记。当其他自然灾害被命名时——为了支持文献记录、社会记忆和记录保存——热浪没有命名,有时甚至被正面看待,作为假日天气。尽管与其他灾害相比,它相对不显眼,但在一些国家,每年因环境灾害造成的死亡人数最高。人体体温调节系统在长时间暴露在高温下时可能失灵,导致体温过高、中暑和死亡。通过多个现实生活中的例子,古德尔展示了热量是如何渗透到家庭中,利用漏洞,并证明对那些无法保护自己的人尤其有害的。古德尔特别关注热浪是如何加剧社会不平等的。例如,心血管疾病或糖尿病等疾病的共存会降低人们在热浪中调节体温的能力。这种情况的普遍存在是解释老年人因极端高温而死亡人数较高的一个主要因素。古德尔表示,年龄并不是决定热浪期间健康风险增加的唯一因素。对于年龄较小的人来说,热浪仍然是一个主要的健康威胁,特别是对于那些低估其风险和不采取预防措施的人,以及那些买不起空调或隔热材料的人。社会经济地位和就业条件影响热浪对个人构成的风险。例如,古德尔描述了农业工人对热浪的高度暴露以及采取适应措施以避免死亡的必要性。这些措施的可及性或可用性各不相同,造成了该部门的不平等。古德尔用大量篇幅论述了适应高温的问题以及这些措施的局限性。其中一个内容丰富的章节围绕着空调的发明和广泛采用展开,尤其是在美国。空调可以让那些买得起空调的人从炎热的气温中解脱出来,但这可能会加剧温暖地区健康和死亡率的不平等。此外,空调并不是一个完整的解决方案。在长时间的高温天气和空调的广泛使用期间,电网线路承受着很高的压力,一旦出现故障,可能会使整个城市瘫痪。古德尔在书中讨论的其他适应性措施与城市在日益城市化和日益炎热的世界中面临的挑战有关。城市热岛的形成使城市处于危险之中,加剧了城乡在健康方面的不平等。城市热岛是由于有限的植被、非反射表面、城市峡谷效应和人类活动等因素导致城市热量释放减少,使城市比拥有更多绿地和水体的农村地区更温暖。书中讨论的一些解决方案与城市绿化和屋顶白色粉刷有关,但古德尔描述了这些创新如何面临一些障碍。城市绿化可以有效地提供荫凉和减少热岛,但在缺水和炎热的地区具有挑战性。在建筑物的建筑特征不易改变的历史中心,屋顶彩绘可能不适合。迁移模式也受到温度异常的严重影响。古德尔描述了一种矛盾的现象,这种现象与美国国内移民人数的增加有关,这些移民进入了气候风险较高的地区。特别是,受热浪和海平面上升严重影响的南方几个地区,随着人们退休到更温暖的气候,人口增长幅度更大。不断增长的人口和不断升级的气候风险可能在未来对这些地区构成重大挑战。 相反,对于日益遭受气候变化后果的经济上处于不利地位的人来说,移民往往是逃避恶劣气候条件的最终解决办法,因为恶劣气候条件使农业等某些经济活动无法进行。与此同时,由于天气条件的恶化,迁徙路径变得越来越危险和不切实际。古德尔的书涵盖了人口学者特别关注的与热量和人类有关的三个主要主题:热浪日益普遍及其对人口结果的广泛影响;适应措施的重要性和复杂性;以及由于气候引发的挑战而扩大的现有社会人口不平等。近年来,关于热浪影响的学术研究越来越多。最近的一项研究表明,造成约7万人死亡的2003年欧洲灾难性热浪是一个重要的转折点,导致有关温度相关死亡率和发病率的研究增加(Campbell et al., 2018)。2022年,热浪导致欧洲约6万人死亡,这表明热浪的影响仍然是致命的,这引发了人们对个人适应气温上升能力的担忧(Ballester et al., 2023)。热浪的日益普遍使得研究气候变化对人口的影响尤为紧迫。古德尔为人口学者提供了新颖的视角,深入研究了现有人口研究中相对未被探索的话题。他强调了气候变化如何创造有利于疾病媒介(如蚊子和蜱虫)传播的环境。这可能导致登革热、莱姆病和疟疾等疾病的更广泛分布,对公共卫生和人类死亡率构成新的挑战。此外,书中强调的一个重要研究领域是气候变化归因,旨在了解特定的环境灾害是由自然气候变化引起的,还是由人类活动和温室气体排放决定的。需要对这一主题进行更多的研究,以补充现有的研究,计算碳的死亡成本(二氧化碳排放造成的死亡人数)(Bressler, 2021)和估算由人类主导的气候变化决定的与热有关的死亡负担(Vicedo-Cabrera等人,2021)。必须进一步研究人为气候变化的人口和健康成本,以及减缓气候变化以限制这种影响的潜力。虽然古德尔的书讨论了高温对迁徙、死亡率和发病率的影响,但它并没有深入探讨高温对生育率、围产期和孕产妇健康的影响。与死亡率相比,关于热量对这些结果影响的研究更为有限。尽管最近人们对热对生育能力和生育结果的影响感兴趣,但关于这一主题仍有许多未解决的问题(Barreca等人,2018;Chersich et al., 2020;豪伊杜,豪伊杜2022)。温度与生育能力之间的联系机制仍在争论中,这对于理解在一个低生育率和人口老龄化的世界里,温度如何影响生殖健康和行为至关重要。这本书还可以更深入地探讨多种环境灾害同时影响人口时对公共卫生和人口动态的复合影响。这种复合影响在热浪与野火或洪水事件同时发生的地区尤为明显,可能会放大对公共卫生结果的影响。这本公共科学书籍读起来毫不费力,以新闻风格写成,将科学证据与遭受高温负面影响的个人的生活经历相结合。每一章都是一个独立的故事,深入讲述了高温如何影响生活的一个特定方面,从农业工作和媒介传播疾病的传播,到在沸腾的城市中生存和空调的发明,使本书成为一本容易参考的书。因此,它为普通大众和专家读者提供了一个深刻的阅读,强调了地球上人类生命面临的紧迫挑战。正如这本书引人入胜的标题所反映的那样,高温的普遍影响将不可避免地触及我们所有人,迫使我们努力解决其含义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
4.00%
发文量
60
期刊介绍: Population and Development Review is essential reading to keep abreast of population studies, research on the interrelationships between population and socioeconomic change, and related thinking on public policy. Its interests span both developed and developing countries, theoretical advances as well as empirical analyses and case studies, a broad range of disciplinary approaches, and concern with historical as well as present-day problems.
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信