학술논문

Harnessing cross-border resources to confront climate change
Document Type
article
Author
Aburto-Oropeza, OctavioJohnson, Andrew FAgha, MickeyAllen, Edith BAllen, Michael FGonzález, Jesús ArellanoMoreno, Diego M ArenasBeas-Luna, RodrigoButterfield, ScottCaetano, GabrielCaselle, Jennifer EGaytán, Gamaliel CastañedaCastorani, Max CNCat, Linh AnhCavanaugh, KyleChambers, Jeffrey QCooper, Robert DArafeh-Dalmau, NurDawson, Toddde la Vega Pérez, Aníbal DíazDiMento, Joseph FCGuerrero, Saúl DomínguezEdwards, MatthewEnnen, Joshua REstrada-Medina, HectorFierro-Estrada, NataliaGadsden, HéctorGalina-Tessaro, PatriciaGibbons, Paul MGoode, Eric VGorris, Morgan EHarmon, ThomasHecht, SusannaFragoso, Marco Antonio HerediaHernández-Solano, AlanHernández-Cortés, DanaeHernández-Carmona, GustavoHillard, ScottHuey, Raymond BHufford, Matthew BJenerette, G DarrelJiménez-Osornio, JuanLópez-Nava, Karla JoanaReséndiz, Rafael A LaraLeslie, Heather MLópez-Feldman, AlejandroLuja, Víctor HMéndez, Norberto MartínezMautz, William JMedellín-Azuara, JosuéMeléndez-Torres, Cristinade la Cruz, Fausto R MéndezMicheli, FiorenzaMiles, Donald BMontagner, GiovannaMontaño-Moctezuma, GabrielaMüller, JohannesOliva, PaulinaÁlvarez, José Abraham OrtinezOrtiz-Partida, J PabloPalleiro-Nayar, JulioFigueroa, Víctor Hugo PáramoParnell, P EdRaimondi, PeterRamírez-Valdez, ArturoRanderson, James TReed, Daniel CRiquelme, MeritxellTorres, Teresita RomeroRosen, Philip CRoss-Ibarra, JeffreySánchez-Cordero, VictorSandoval-Solis, SamuelSantos, Juan CarlosSawers, RuairidhSinervo, BarrySites, Jack WSosa-Nishizaki, OscarStanton, TravisStapp, Jared RStewart, Joseph AETorre, JorgeTorres-Moye, GuillermoTreseder, Kathleen KValdez-Villavicencio, JorgeJiménez, Fernando I ValleVaughn, MercyWelton, LukeWestphal, Michael FWoolrich-Piña, GuillermoYunez-Naude, AntonioZertuche-González, José ATaylor, J Edward
Source
Subject
Environmental Sciences
Political Science
Human Society
Climate Action
US southwest
Northern Mexico
Binational collaborations
Environmental innovation
Cross-border transformation
Research integration
Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Studies in Human Society
Agricultural
veterinary and food sciences
Environmental sciences
Human society
Language
Abstract
The US and Mexico share a common history in many areas, including language and culture. They face ecological changes due to the increased frequency and severity of droughts and rising energy demands; trends that entail economic costs for both nations and major implications for human wellbeing. We describe an ongoing effort by the Environment Working Group (EWG), created by The University of California's UC-Mexico initiative in 2015, to promote binational research, teaching, and outreach collaborations on the implications of climate change for Mexico and California. We synthesize current knowledge about the most pressing issues related to climate change in the US-Mexico border region and provide examples of cross-border discoveries and research initiatives, highlighting the need to move forward in six broad rubrics. This and similar binational cooperation efforts can lead to improved living standards, generate a collaborative mindset among participating universities, and create an international network to address urgent sustainability challenges affecting both countries.