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\\u201cA spectre is haunting Europe,\\u201d but this time it is not communism. Vladimir Putin has put Russia\\u2019s nuclear forces on \\u201cspecial combat readiness,\\u201d bringing back memories and fears for some of us, reminiscent of the darkest days of the Cold War. What would be the climatic consequences of nuclear war? Our guest are Dr. Alan Robock, Distinguished Professor in the Environmental Sciences Department at Rutgers University and Dr. Joshua Coupe, a postdoctoral researcher at Louisiana State University. They and their colleagues are modeling the climatic consequences of a nuclear exchange between Russia and the United States, aka, \\u201cNuclear Winter,\\u201d a notion popularized by Carl Sagan in the 1980s (some of us are old enough to remember both).
\\nThat\\u2019s our explosive show broadcast on Sunday, March 20th, 2022.
\\nPrevious broadcasts of Sustainability Now! are archived at KSQD.org and on Pocket Casts, Google Podcasts and Spotify.
\\nSustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation and Environmental Innovations.
\\nHere are some resources:
\\nCoupe, J., Bardeen, C. G., Robock, A., & Toon, O. B. (2019). "Nuclear winter responses to nuclear war between the United States and Russia in the Whole Atmosphere," Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 124, 8522\\u201343.
\\nJeannie Peterson, ed. The Aftermath--The Human and Ecological Consequences of Nuclear War (New York: Pantheon/Ambio, 1983).
\\nKj\\xf8lv Egeland (2021) "The Ideology of Nuclear Order," New Political Science, 43:2, 208-230.
\\nRutgers U. Research Archive: http://climate.envsci.rutgers.edu/nuclear/
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