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Climate Stewardship Book

CLIMATE STEWARDSHIP: TAKING COLLECTIVE ACTION TO PROTECT CALIFORNIA

After decades of warnings by scientists and activists, it's clear that society cannot wait for nation-states to prevent climate disruption when there are actions individuals and groups can take to mitigate and adapt to climate change. The book Climate Stewardship: Taking Collective Action to Protect California, just published by UC Press, shows how Californians are working together across a diversity of communities and landscapes to improve resilience and address climate justice.

California is uniquely positioned to develop and implement novel solutions to widespread climate challenges, making this book a compelling read for anyone who cares about the Earth. The shared experiences of climate stewards featured in the book, including volunteers, Indigenous leaders and community members of color addressing climate justice, reveal that connecting with others to prevent climate disruption transcends self and provides a path to joy and hope for a better future.

Climate science that justifies these actions is woven throughout the book, making it easy to learn about Earth’s complex systems. “It’s science in a narrative form to share what can be done on the ground,” explains author Adina Merenlender, an internationally recognized conservation biologist who has published more than 100 scientific research articles as a Cooperative Extension Specialist at UC Berkeley. Her co-author is Brendan Buhler, an award-winning science writer whose work has been collected in The Best American Science and Nature Writing. Original paintings by Obi Kaufmann, author of The California Field Atlas, provide an artistic interlude between examples of collective action spanning agricultural, wild, and urban areas. Together they explore climate stewardship, science, and art in a way that is enjoyable, inspiring, and even amusing.

Painting by Obi Kaufmann
Painting by Obi Kaufmann

Los Angeles Review of Books

"Over the course of seven compact chapters, each dedicated to a different landscape within the state, they outline how residents are laboring to adapt these environments to climate change and its emerging impacts."

Such granularity enables the authors to present climate change as a set of localized environmental challenges with equally localized context-specific solutions or interventions. A global-scale crisis may be a daunting hydra-headed problem, but there are, they show, small, actionable measures that individuals can take to address it. Climate change is not just a monolithic existential threat, in other words."

Sayd Randle

 Buy the book here with 30% discount code UCPSAVE30. Click buying options and select "UC Press" from the drop down menu.

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Become a Climate Steward
Become a Climate Steward

Climate Stewardship Book Author Events
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The climate leaders profiled in this book are inspirational. Their stories reflect the diversity of California’s people and landscapes and show the power of collective action to create change. They also reveal our profound connection with nature and with one another, and the power of nature-based solutions to address the climate crisis.

Perhaps most importantly, this wonderful book reminds us of what we are capable of as individuals to improve the future of our planet and people.” Wade Crowfoot, California Secretary for Natural Resources 

Photo Credit: Wishtoyo Chumash Foundation
Photo Credit: Wishtoyo Chumash Foundation
 Climate Stewardship” minces no words in describing the hazards that California is already experiencing from climate-change, including raging wildfires, thirsty droughts, flooded highways and displaced species. Yet through many examples, this hopeful and inspiring book shows the power of collective community action to combat climate extremes and create resilient communities and ecosystems, from the neighborhoods and cities of the Bay Area, Silicon Valley and Los Angeles, to the farmlands of the Central and San Joaquin Valleys, and across the diversity of California’s natural coastal, desert, lake, scrub and forest ecosystems.” Claire Kremen, President’s Excellence Chair in Biodiversity University British Columbia, 2020 Laureate Volvo Environment Prize