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Climate and readiness : understanding climate vulnerability of U. S. Joint Force readiness / Katharina Ley Best, Scott R. Stephenson, Susan A. Resetar, Paul W. Mayberry, Emmi Yonekura, Rahim Ali, Joshua Klimas, Stephanie Stewart, Jessica Arana, Inez Khan, Vanessa Wolf.

RAND Reports Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Best, Katharina Ley, author.
Stephenson, Scott Ryan, author.
Resetar, Susan A., 1961- author.
Mayberry, Paul W., author.
Yonekura, Emmi, author.
Klimas, Joshua, author.
Stewart, Stephanie, author.
Contributor:
United States. Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Personnel and Readiness)
Rand Corporation. National Security Research Division.
Rand Corporation.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
United States--Armed Forces--Operational readiness.
United States.
Global warming--Government policy--United States.
Global warming.
Climatology--Research--United States.
Climatology.
Military art and science--Forecasting.
Military art and science.
Operational readiness (Military science).
Climatology--Research.
Global warming--Government policy.
Other Title:
Climate and Readiness
Place of Publication:
RAND Corporation 2023
Summary:
The physical environment in which the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) must operate is being affected by climate hazards, which adversely affect the performance of the joint force and the systems that support it. Generating, maintaining, and even increasing force readiness in light of changing climate threats is a key component of meeting high-level U.S. strategic goals, from defending the homeland to deterring aggression and strategic attacks. Acknowledging that climate effects are likely to become more severe as global temperatures rise, the authors of this report discuss the results of an initial study they conducted to develop links between climate and readiness, laying the groundwork for the eventual integration of climate risk with quantitative readiness assessment and decisionmaking to help ensure that military forces can reliably and affordably sustain needed readiness in a changing climate. A key contribution of the study is a climate readiness framework for understanding the risk to readiness that may result from a combination of (1) exposure to climate hazards, such as drought, flooding, wildfire, and tropical storms, and (2) the underlying vulnerability of readiness inputs — i.e., people, training, equipment, and force projection — to such hazard exposure. View the digital appendix
Notes:
See also RAND/RR-A1551-2

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