"[Managing the Climate Crisis] melds both into a discussion of adapting human construction to withstand the throes of climate change, and is written by two design and planning experts who examine not just structural choices, but the political policies guiding urban and environmental design....Libraries strong in urban design and planning, climate change analysis, and adaptation for future health and safety will find the practical, wide-ranging approach of Managing the Climate Crisis to be satisfyingly specific."
Donovan's Bookshelf
"This would be a useful resource for someone deciding where to live and work, and it should be a handbook for municipal planners making short- and long-term decisions....Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers."
Choice
"With the climate crisis already at our doorsteps, Barnett and Bouw focus on tools readily available to us as they offer real-world solutions to the world’s growing environmental challenges. Their winning approach to problem solving makes wise use of current government programs, tried-and-true nature-based design principles, smart engineering, and solid construction techniques to safeguard communities and offer hope for a more resilient future."
James F. Murley, Chief Resilience Officer, Miami-Dade County, Florida
"Using cutting-edge examples, Managing the Climate Crisis offers a structured guide for building resilience. This book puts the costs and benefits of dealing with pressing climate challenges into high relief, and will empower anyone who reads it to make better, bolder decisions to safeguard our collective future."
Lauren N. Sorkin, Executive Director, Resilient Cities Network
"This impressive and wide-ranging book provides a compelling set of principles, policies, and designs. The description of US and international communities that have acted should inspire us, while the suggested policies provide a pragmatic roadmap to help others get there. I highly recommend Managing the Climate Crisis, whether you are a government official looking to learn from others, a practicing landscape architect or planner tasked with creating resilient design strategies, or a faculty member who is teaching the next generation about this existential threat."
Gavin Smith, Ph.D., AICP, Professor, Department of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning, North Carolina State University