Introduction

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Abstract

This chapter details the monstrous challenge of sea-level rise as an impact of climate change. It discusses the network of satellites that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has developed and deployed over the years to determine what is happening, how fast, and why. It asks how this network was constructed and the role of bureaucracy-driven decision making in a difficult political environment. Today, there exists an integrated, large-scale satellite system to track sea-level rise, its spread, causes, and impacts. In many ways, sea-level rise is the clearest and most understandable result of a warming planet. NASA and its partners built the network satellite-by-satellite over decades. It has gone from initiation to institutionalization. The introduction tracks how this network was built and the role of NASA in that “political construction.” It shows how NASA drove decision-making—sometimes well, sometimes not so well. It demonstrates the barriers along the way and how NASA and its key leaders overcame them through various strategies to fashion a coalition of support and neutralize opposition.

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APA

Lambright, W. H. (2023). Introduction. In Palgrave Studies in the History of Science and Technology (Vol. Part F1542, pp. 1–10). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-40363-7_1

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