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Gilbert F. White

Gilbert Fowler White (November 26, 1911 – October 5, 2006) was a prominent American geographer, sometimes termed the "father of floodplain management" and the "leading environmental geographer of the 20th century" (Wescoat, 2006). White is known predominantly for his work on natural hazards, particularly flooding, and the importance of sound water management in contemporary society.

Gilbert F. White
BornNovember 26, 1911 (1911-11-26)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
DiedOctober 5, 2006 (2006-10-06) (aged 94)
Alma materUniversity of Chicago
University of Colorado
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsGeography
InstitutionsUniversity of Chicago

Background

White was raised in Chicago in the Hyde Park neighborhood, and spent summers in the Tongue River Valley of Wyoming, before studying at the University of Chicago, where he earned his B.S. in 1932 and his PhD in 1942 (published 1945). From 1946 to 1955 he was President of Haverford College. He then returned to Chicago as a Professor of Geography, where he was the central figure in the "Chicago school" of natural hazards research. In 1970, he moved to the University of Colorado, before retiring after ten years there. Having published his first paper in 1935, he was still publishing into his 90s (Wescoat and White, 2003).

White was motivated by his Quaker faith to do research beneficial to humanity. As a conscientious objector to World War II, from 1942 to 1946 he served with the American Friends Service Committee aiding war refugees in France, and was briefly interned by the Nazis at Baden-Baden. He continued to serve as a leader in various Quaker service organizations for much of his life. He was also heavily involved in applying his research to reform flooding and water policy in the United States and the Middle East.

In 1944, White married Anne Underwood, with whom he had three children (Will, Mary, and Frances). Anne collaborated with Gilbert in his research until her death in 1989. Gilbert remarried in 2003 to Claire Sheridan.

Scholarly contributions

White's main contributions to society and to scholarship have been classified by Kates (2011) as follows:

  • How to bring safe water to all the world's people as a human right
  • How to reduce significantly the global toll of hazard deaths and damages
  • How to facilitate peace, through joint water development and management
  • How to make geography (in particular) and science (in general) more useful to the world
  • How to enable people to coexist with nature and develop sustainably.

In 1972, at the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm, Gilbert F. White and a meteorologist Thomas Malone proposed the program of environmental monitoring. The ideas of environmental monitoring were announced in the brochure «Environmental Monitoring: Physical and Chemical Measurements», where environmental monitoring was understood as a systematic observation of the environment and identification of possible changes, especially in connection with human activities.[1] At the meeting participants proposed to build a system of controlling anthropogenic changes of the environment which would allow planning environmental management measures. In 1972, at the UN Conference on the Human Environment the program of environmental monitoring and establishing biosphere reserves was accepted.[2]

Some of White's most notable work involved the identification and classification of adjustment mechanisms for flooding in the United States, perceptions of natural hazards, and choice of natural hazard adjustments (Hinshaw, 2006). White identified adjustments to flooding as being either structural or non-structural. He advocated, where feasible, adaptation to or accommodation of flood hazards rather than the "structural" solutions (dams, levees, and floodwalls, for example) that dominated policy in the early 20th century. Structural adjustments, developed by engineers, are designed to modify flooding hazards so that humans are protected and can continue to live in areas that are periodically subject to flooding (floodplains). White's non-structural adjustments consist of arrangements imposed by a governing body (local, regional, or national) to restrict the use of floodplains, or flexible human adjustments to flood risk that do not involve substantial investment in flood controls (Tobin and Montz, 1997).

In his influential dissertation entitled "Human adjustment to floods," published in 1945 by the University of Chicago Department of Geography, White argued that an overreliance on structural works in the United States had actually increased damage by flooding, rather than decreasing them. He argued famously in this work – deemed by several commentators to be the most important contribution made by a geographer in 20th-century North America (Hinshaw 2006, Kates 2007) – that "Floods are an act of God, but flood losses are largely an act of man". Public confidence in structural works increased occupance of, and building on floodplains. Design standards are sometimes inappropriate, and overconfidence develops, resulting in worse disasters if a flood breaches defenses. A recent and relevant example of the impacts of undue confidence in structural works can be seen in Hurricane Katrina's impact on New Orleans, during the summer of 2005. Historically, at least in the US, works were built to certain design specifications (for example, the 100-year flood, or 1% flood). In instances where the design specifications were exceeded (in the case of a 150-year flood, etc.), they failed, thus causing catastrophic loss in overdeveloped floodplains (White et al., 1958).

White worked under President Johnson in committees that advised the establishment of the National Flood Insurance Program – although he was not happy when his cautions were ignored and the NFIP was rolled out too quickly.

White also made major contributions to the human occupance of arid lands and the management problems of such settlements, campaigned on the dangers of nuclear weapons, and sat on many committees dealing with water management in developing countries. He oversaw informal brokering of water management conflicts in the Middle East.

Gilbert F. White, along with his former students and colleagues including Robert Kates and Ian Burton, have become some of the most influential scholars of natural and technological hazards.

Recognition

White received numerous honours in his lifetime.

  • Honorary Fellowship from the American Geographical Society in 1963, and its Daly Medal in 1971.[3]
  • In 2000 he was awarded the Public Welfare Medal from the National Academy of Sciences.[4]
  • White was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1973,
  • Fellow, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
  • Member of the American Philosophical Society (1993)[5]
  • Recipient of the United Nations Sasakawa International Environment Prize (1985)
  • Laureat d'Honneur, International Geographical Union (1988)
  • the Volvo Environment Prize (1995)
  • the National Medal of Science from the NSF (2000).

White received honorary doctorates from the University of Colorado, Earlham College, Hamilton College, Haverford College, Michigan State University, Swarthmore College, Augustana College and the University of Arizona.

The Association of State Floodplain Managers makes several awards in his name.

  • The Goddard-White Award honors the contributions made to floodplain management by Gilbert White and Jim Goddard (1906-1994)
  • the Gilbert F. White National Flood Policy Forum and the ASFPM Flood Hazard Fellowship.
  • Resources for the Future (RFF) runs the Gilbert F. White Postdoctoral Fellowship Program.
  • There is a Gilbert White Award offered yearly by the Association of American Geographers Hazards Specialty Group.
  • Gilbert F. White Doctoral Fellowship, Department of Geography, University of Colorado.
  • In 2008, a Gilbert White Chair was inaugurated at Arizona State University, occupied by Billie Lee Turner II.
  • In a move organized by John Thompson (Sussex Univ.) the Gilbert F. White Reference Room is archived at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Institute for Water Resources, Fort Belvoir, Virginia.

Publications

White has over 400 publications to his name.[6]

Books
  • White, G.F. 1945. Human Adjustment to Floods. Department of Geography Research Paper no. 29. Chicago: The University of Chicago. Download ()
  • White, G.F. and American Friends Service Committee. 1949. The United States and the Soviet Union. Yale University Press.
  • White, G.F. With the committee. 1949. Task Force Report on Organization and Policy in the Field of Natural Resources. Executive Branch of the Government, Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • White, G.F. With the commission. 1950. A Water Policy for the American People. Report of the President's Water Policy Commission. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • White, G.F. (ed.). 1956. The Future of Arid Lands. Washington, DC: American Association for the Advancement of Science. (In English and Russian.)
  • White, G.F. With the committee. 1957. The Need for Basic Research with Respect to Renewable Natural Resources. Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council.
  • White, G.F. With the committee. 1958. Integrated River Basin Development. New York: U.N. Department of Economic and Social Affairs. (In English, French and Spanish.). Reprinted with new intro, 1970.
  • White, G.F., W.C. Calef, J.W. Hudson, H.M. Mayer, J.R. Shaeffer, and D.J. Volk. 1958. Changes in Urban Occupance of Flood Plains in the United States. Department of Geography Research Papers, No. 57. Chicago: University of Chicago.
  • White, G.F. 1960. Science and the Future of Arid Lands. Paris: United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. (In English, French and Spanish.)
  • White, G.F. 1961. Papers on Flood Problems. Department of Geography Research Papers, No. 70. Chicago: University of Chicago.
  • White, G.F. 1964. Choice of Adjustment to Floods. Department of Geography Research Papers, No. 93. Chicago: University of Chicago.
  • White, G.F. With the committee. 1966. Alternatives in Water Management. Report of the Committee on Water, Division of Earth Sciences. Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences.
  • White, G.F. With the commission. Weather and Climate Modification Report of the Special Commission on Weather Modification. Washington, DC: National Science Foundation.
  • White, G.F. With the committee. 1967. African and American Universities Program, 1958-1966: A Summary. University of Chicago.
  • White, G.F. With the committee. 1968. Water and Choice in the Colorado Basin: An Example of Alternatives in Water Management. National Research Council Committee on Water. No. 1689. Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences.
  • White, G.F. 1969. Strategies of American Water Management. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. (In English and Russian.)
  • White, G.F. (ed.). 1969. Water, Health and Society, Selected Papers by Abel Wolman. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  • White, G.F., D.J. Bradley and A.U. White. 1972. Drawers of Water: Domestic Water Use in East Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • White, G.F. With the committee. 1972. Man-made Lakes as Modified Ecosystems. SCOPE Report No. 2. Paris: International Council of Scientific Unions.
  • White, G.F. With the committee. 1972. The Agnes Floods. Report for the Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration by the National Advisory Committee on Oceans and Atmosphere. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • White, G.F., W.C. Ackermann and E.B. Worthington (eds.). 1973. Man-made Lakes: Their Problems and Environmental Effects. Geophysical Monograph 17. Washington, DC: American Geophysical Union.
  • White, G.F. (ed.). 1974. Natural Hazards: Local, National, Global. New York: Oxford University Press. (In Russian, 1978).
  • White, G.F. and J.E. Haas. 1975. Assessment of Research on Natural Hazards. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  • Brinkmann, W.A.R., H.C. Cochrane, N.J. Ericksen and White, G.F. 1975. Flood Hazard in the United States: A Research Assessment. Boulder: University of Colorado, Institute of Behavioral Science.
  • White, G.F. with the committee. 1976. Natural Hazard Management in Coastal Areas. Washington, DC: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Coastal Zone Management.
  • White, G.F. With the committee. 1976. Water for All. Statement of the International Institute for Environment and Development. Earthscan. (In English, Spanish, French and Arabic)
  • White, G.F. (ed.). 1977. Environmental Effects of Complex River Development: International Experience. Boulder: Westview Press.
  • Holdgate, M.W. and White, G.F.(eds.). 1977. Environmental Issues. SCOPE Report 10. Chichester: John Wiley.
  • Burton I., RW. Kates and White, G.F. 1978. The Environment as Hazard. Oxford University Press (reissued with new intro, Guilford Press, 1993). Google Books [1]
  • White, G.F. (ed.). 1978. Environmental Effects of Arid Land Irrigation in Developing Countries. Paris: UNESCO.
  • Holdgate, M.W., M. Kassas and White, G.F. (eds.). 1982. The World Environment, 1972-1982. Dublin: Tycooly International Publishing.
  • London, J. and White, G.F. (eds.)1984. The Environmental Effects of Nuclear War. Boulder: Westview Press.
  • Dotts, L. and a steering Committee including White. 1986. Planet Earth in Jeopardy: Environmental Consequence of Nuclear War. Colchester: John Wiley and Sons.
  • Mather J.R. and G.V. Sdayuk. (eds.). 1991. Global Change: Geographical Approaches—A Joint USSR-USA Project under the Scientific Leadership of Vladimir M. Kotlyakov and Gilbert F. White. Tucson: University of Arizona Press( also in Russian). (input by White)
  • White, G.F. and M.F. Myers (eds.). 1994. Coping with the Flood: The Next Phase. Special journal issue of Water Resources Update, 95(spring).
  • White, G.F. with 14 others. 1995. Technical Bases for Yucca Mountain Standards. Washington, DC: National Academy Press. Download [2]
  • White, G.F. With the committee. 1999. Water for the Future: The West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israel and Jordan. Committee on Sustainable Water Supplies in the Middle East. Washington, DC: National Academy Press. Download [3]
  • Wescoat, J.L. Jr and G.F. White. 2003. Water for Life: Water Management and Environmental Policy. Cambridge University Press. Google preview [4]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Malon T. Environmental Monitoring: Physical and Chemical Measurements Proceedings of the Scientific Program // XVII General Assembly of the International Union of Biological Sciences, 1971. Pp. 62-65
  2. ^ Sobisevich A. V., Snytko V. A., Postnikov A. V. The surrounding environment monitoring in the Soviet Union: a review of establishing new ecological science // IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science. 2019. Vol. 350, no. 1. P. 1–6.
  3. ^ (PDF). American Geographical Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 4, 2009. Retrieved March 2, 2009.
  4. ^ . National Academy of Sciences. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011. Retrieved February 18, 2011.
  5. ^ Obituary 2017-02-14 at the Wayback Machine in: Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Vol. 152, No. 3 (2008).
  6. ^ See

References

  • Bollens, S., Kaiser, E., & Burby, R. 1988. Evaluating the effects of local floodplain management policies on property owner behavior. Environmental Management, 12, 311-325
  • Cohen, M. 2006. The roots of sustainability science: a tribute to Gilbert F. White. Sustainability: Science, Practice, & Policy 2(2):1-3.
  • Hinshaw, R.E. 2006. Living with nature's extremes: the life of Gilbert Fowler White. Boulder, CO: Johnson Books.
  • Kates, R. 1962. Hazard and Choice Perception in Flood Plain Management. Department of Geography Research Paper no. 78, University of Chicago: University of Chicago.
  • Kates, R.W. 2011. Gilbert F. White, 1911-2006, A Biographical Memoir. Washington, D.C: The National Academies.
  • Kreutzwiser, R., Woodley, I, & Shrubsole, D. 1994. Perceptions of flood hazards and floodplain management regulations in Glen Williams, Ontario. Canadian Water Resources Journal, 19, 115-124
  • McPherson, H., & Saarinen, T. 1977. Floodplain dwellers' perception of the flood hazard in Tucson, Arizona. Annals of Regional Science, 11, 25-40
  • Mitchell, B., & Shrubsole, D. 1992. Ontario Conservation Authorities: Myth and Reality. Waterloo: University of Waterloo, Department of Geography.
  • Shrubsole, D., Green, M., & Scherer, J. 1997. The actual and perceived effects of floodplain land use regulations on property values in London, Ontario. Canadian Geographer, 41, 166-178
  • Tobin, G., and Montz, B. 1997. Natural Hazards: Explanation and Integration. New York: Guilford Press
  • Wescoat,J L. 2006. Gilbert Fowler White (1911-2006), wisdom in environmental geography. Geographical Review, 96 (4): 700–710.

External links

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Gilbert F White news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Gilbert Fowler White November 26 1911 October 5 2006 was a prominent American geographer sometimes termed the father of floodplain management and the leading environmental geographer of the 20th century Wescoat 2006 White is known predominantly for his work on natural hazards particularly flooding and the importance of sound water management in contemporary society Gilbert F WhiteBornNovember 26 1911 1911 11 26 Chicago Illinois U S DiedOctober 5 2006 2006 10 06 aged 94 Boulder Colorado U S Alma materUniversity of ChicagoUniversity of ColoradoAwardsCharles P Daly Medal 1971 Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement 1987 Volvo Environment Prize 1995 Scientific careerFieldsGeographyInstitutionsUniversity of Chicago Contents 1 Background 2 Scholarly contributions 3 Recognition 4 Publications 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground EditWhite was raised in Chicago in the Hyde Park neighborhood and spent summers in the Tongue River Valley of Wyoming before studying at the University of Chicago where he earned his B S in 1932 and his PhD in 1942 published 1945 From 1946 to 1955 he was President of Haverford College He then returned to Chicago as a Professor of Geography where he was the central figure in the Chicago school of natural hazards research In 1970 he moved to the University of Colorado before retiring after ten years there Having published his first paper in 1935 he was still publishing into his 90s Wescoat and White 2003 White was motivated by his Quaker faith to do research beneficial to humanity As a conscientious objector to World War II from 1942 to 1946 he served with the American Friends Service Committee aiding war refugees in France and was briefly interned by the Nazis at Baden Baden He continued to serve as a leader in various Quaker service organizations for much of his life He was also heavily involved in applying his research to reform flooding and water policy in the United States and the Middle East In 1944 White married Anne Underwood with whom he had three children Will Mary and Frances Anne collaborated with Gilbert in his research until her death in 1989 Gilbert remarried in 2003 to Claire Sheridan Scholarly contributions EditWhite s main contributions to society and to scholarship have been classified by Kates 2011 as follows How to bring safe water to all the world s people as a human right How to reduce significantly the global toll of hazard deaths and damages How to facilitate peace through joint water development and management How to make geography in particular and science in general more useful to the world How to enable people to coexist with nature and develop sustainably In 1972 at the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm Gilbert F White and a meteorologist Thomas Malone proposed the program of environmental monitoring The ideas of environmental monitoring were announced in the brochure Environmental Monitoring Physical and Chemical Measurements where environmental monitoring was understood as a systematic observation of the environment and identification of possible changes especially in connection with human activities 1 At the meeting participants proposed to build a system of controlling anthropogenic changes of the environment which would allow planning environmental management measures In 1972 at the UN Conference on the Human Environment the program of environmental monitoring and establishing biosphere reserves was accepted 2 Some of White s most notable work involved the identification and classification of adjustment mechanisms for flooding in the United States perceptions of natural hazards and choice of natural hazard adjustments Hinshaw 2006 White identified adjustments to flooding as being either structural or non structural He advocated where feasible adaptation to or accommodation of flood hazards rather than the structural solutions dams levees and floodwalls for example that dominated policy in the early 20th century Structural adjustments developed by engineers are designed to modify flooding hazards so that humans are protected and can continue to live in areas that are periodically subject to flooding floodplains White s non structural adjustments consist of arrangements imposed by a governing body local regional or national to restrict the use of floodplains or flexible human adjustments to flood risk that do not involve substantial investment in flood controls Tobin and Montz 1997 In his influential dissertation entitled Human adjustment to floods published in 1945 by the University of Chicago Department of Geography White argued that an overreliance on structural works in the United States had actually increased damage by flooding rather than decreasing them He argued famously in this work deemed by several commentators to be the most important contribution made by a geographer in 20th century North America Hinshaw 2006 Kates 2007 that Floods are an act of God but flood losses are largely an act of man Public confidence in structural works increased occupance of and building on floodplains Design standards are sometimes inappropriate and overconfidence develops resulting in worse disasters if a flood breaches defenses A recent and relevant example of the impacts of undue confidence in structural works can be seen in Hurricane Katrina s impact on New Orleans during the summer of 2005 Historically at least in the US works were built to certain design specifications for example the 100 year flood or 1 flood In instances where the design specifications were exceeded in the case of a 150 year flood etc they failed thus causing catastrophic loss in overdeveloped floodplains White et al 1958 White worked under President Johnson in committees that advised the establishment of the National Flood Insurance Program although he was not happy when his cautions were ignored and the NFIP was rolled out too quickly White also made major contributions to the human occupance of arid lands and the management problems of such settlements campaigned on the dangers of nuclear weapons and sat on many committees dealing with water management in developing countries He oversaw informal brokering of water management conflicts in the Middle East Gilbert F White along with his former students and colleagues including Robert Kates and Ian Burton have become some of the most influential scholars of natural and technological hazards Recognition EditWhite received numerous honours in his lifetime Honorary Fellowship from the American Geographical Society in 1963 and its Daly Medal in 1971 3 In 2000 he was awarded the Public Welfare Medal from the National Academy of Sciences 4 White was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1973 Fellow the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Member of the American Philosophical Society 1993 5 Recipient of the United Nations Sasakawa International Environment Prize 1985 Laureat d Honneur International Geographical Union 1988 the Volvo Environment Prize 1995 the National Medal of Science from the NSF 2000 White received honorary doctorates from the University of Colorado Earlham College Hamilton College Haverford College Michigan State University Swarthmore College Augustana College and the University of Arizona The Association of State Floodplain Managers makes several awards in his name The Goddard White Award honors the contributions made to floodplain management by Gilbert White and Jim Goddard 1906 1994 the Gilbert F White National Flood Policy Forum and the ASFPM Flood Hazard Fellowship Resources for the Future RFF runs the Gilbert F White Postdoctoral Fellowship Program There is a Gilbert White Award offered yearly by the Association of American Geographers Hazards Specialty Group Gilbert F White Doctoral Fellowship Department of Geography University of Colorado In 2008 a Gilbert White Chair was inaugurated at Arizona State University occupied by Billie Lee Turner II In a move organized by John Thompson Sussex Univ the Gilbert F White Reference Room is archived at the U S Army Corps of Engineers Institute for Water Resources Fort Belvoir Virginia Publications EditWhite has over 400 publications to his name 6 BooksWhite G F 1945 Human Adjustment to Floods Department of Geography Research Paper no 29 Chicago The University of Chicago Download PDF White G F and American Friends Service Committee 1949 The United States and the Soviet Union Yale University Press White G F With the committee 1949 Task Force Report on Organization and Policy in the Field of Natural Resources Executive Branch of the Government Washington DC U S Government Printing Office White G F With the commission 1950 A Water Policy for the American People Report of the President s Water Policy Commission Washington DC U S Government Printing Office White G F ed 1956 The Future of Arid Lands Washington DC American Association for the Advancement of Science In English and Russian White G F With the committee 1957 The Need for Basic Research with Respect to Renewable Natural Resources Washington DC National Academy of Sciences National Research Council White G F With the committee 1958 Integrated River Basin Development New York U N Department of Economic and Social Affairs In English French and Spanish Reprinted with new intro 1970 White G F W C Calef J W Hudson H M Mayer J R Shaeffer and D J Volk 1958 Changes in Urban Occupance of Flood Plains in the United States Department of Geography Research Papers No 57 Chicago University of Chicago White G F 1960 Science and the Future of Arid Lands Paris United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization In English French and Spanish White G F 1961 Papers on Flood Problems Department of Geography Research Papers No 70 Chicago University of Chicago White G F 1964 Choice of Adjustment to Floods Department of Geography Research Papers No 93 Chicago University of Chicago White G F With the committee 1966 Alternatives in Water Management Report of the Committee on Water Division of Earth Sciences Washington DC National Academy of Sciences White G F With the commission Weather and Climate Modification Report of the Special Commission on Weather Modification Washington DC National Science Foundation White G F With the committee 1967 African and American Universities Program 1958 1966 A Summary University of Chicago White G F With the committee 1968 Water and Choice in the Colorado Basin An Example of Alternatives in Water Management National Research Council Committee on Water No 1689 Washington DC National Academy of Sciences White G F 1969 Strategies of American Water Management Ann Arbor The University of Michigan Press In English and Russian White G F ed 1969 Water Health and Society Selected Papers by Abel Wolman Bloomington Indiana University Press White G F D J Bradley and A U White 1972 Drawers of Water Domestic Water Use in East Africa Chicago University of Chicago Press White G F With the committee 1972 Man made Lakes as Modified Ecosystems SCOPE Report No 2 Paris International Council of Scientific Unions White G F With the committee 1972 The Agnes Floods Report for the Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration by the National Advisory Committee on Oceans and Atmosphere Washington DC U S Government Printing Office White G F W C Ackermann and E B Worthington eds 1973 Man made Lakes Their Problems and Environmental Effects Geophysical Monograph 17 Washington DC American Geophysical Union White G F ed 1974 Natural Hazards Local National Global New York Oxford University Press In Russian 1978 White G F and J E Haas 1975 Assessment of Research on Natural Hazards Cambridge MA MIT Press Brinkmann W A R H C Cochrane N J Ericksen and White G F 1975 Flood Hazard in the United States A Research Assessment Boulder University of Colorado Institute of Behavioral Science White G F with the committee 1976 Natural Hazard Management in Coastal Areas Washington DC National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Office of Coastal Zone Management White G F With the committee 1976 Water for All Statement of the International Institute for Environment and Development Earthscan In English Spanish French and Arabic White G F ed 1977 Environmental Effects of Complex River Development International Experience Boulder Westview Press Holdgate M W and White G F eds 1977 Environmental Issues SCOPE Report 10 Chichester John Wiley Burton I RW Kates and White G F 1978 The Environment as Hazard Oxford University Press reissued with new intro Guilford Press 1993 Google Books 1 White G F ed 1978 Environmental Effects of Arid Land Irrigation in Developing Countries Paris UNESCO Holdgate M W M Kassas and White G F eds 1982 The World Environment 1972 1982 Dublin Tycooly International Publishing London J and White G F eds 1984 The Environmental Effects of Nuclear War Boulder Westview Press Dotts L and a steering Committee including White 1986 Planet Earth in Jeopardy Environmental Consequence of Nuclear War Colchester John Wiley and Sons Mather J R and G V Sdayuk eds 1991 Global Change Geographical Approaches A Joint USSR USA Project under the Scientific Leadership of Vladimir M Kotlyakov and Gilbert F White Tucson University of Arizona Press also in Russian input by White White G F and M F Myers eds 1994 Coping with the Flood The Next Phase Special journal issue of Water Resources Update 95 spring White G F with 14 others 1995 Technical Bases for Yucca Mountain Standards Washington DC National Academy Press Download 2 White G F With the committee 1999 Water for the Future The West Bank and Gaza Strip Israel and Jordan Committee on Sustainable Water Supplies in the Middle East Washington DC National Academy Press Download 3 Wescoat J L Jr and G F White 2003 Water for Life Water Management and Environmental Policy Cambridge University Press Google preview 4 See also EditGeographers on FilmNotes Edit Malon T Environmental Monitoring Physical and Chemical Measurements Proceedings of the Scientific Program XVII General Assembly of the International Union of Biological Sciences 1971 Pp 62 65 Sobisevich A V Snytko V A Postnikov A V The surrounding environment monitoring in the Soviet Union a review of establishing new ecological science IOP Conference Series Earth and Environmental Science 2019 Vol 350 no 1 P 1 6 American Geographical Society Honorary Fellowships PDF American Geographical Society Archived from the original PDF on July 4 2009 Retrieved March 2 2009 Public Welfare Award National Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on June 4 2011 Retrieved February 18 2011 Obituary Archived 2017 02 14 at the Wayback Machine in Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Vol 152 No 3 2008 See All publications by Gilbert F WhiteReferences EditBollens S Kaiser E amp Burby R 1988 Evaluating the effects of local floodplain management policies on property owner behavior Environmental Management 12 311 325 Cohen M 2006 The roots of sustainability science a tribute to Gilbert F White Sustainability Science Practice amp Policy 2 2 1 3 5 Hinshaw R E 2006 Living with nature s extremes the life of Gilbert Fowler White Boulder CO Johnson Books Kates R 1962 Hazard and Choice Perception in Flood Plain Management Department of Geography Research Paper no 78 University of Chicago University of Chicago Kates R W 2011 Gilbert F White 1911 2006 A Biographical Memoir Washington D C The National Academies Kreutzwiser R Woodley I amp Shrubsole D 1994 Perceptions of flood hazards and floodplain management regulations in Glen Williams Ontario Canadian Water Resources Journal 19 115 124 McPherson H amp Saarinen T 1977 Floodplain dwellers perception of the flood hazard in Tucson Arizona Annals of Regional Science 11 25 40 Mitchell B amp Shrubsole D 1992 Ontario Conservation Authorities Myth and Reality Waterloo University of Waterloo Department of Geography Shrubsole D Green M amp Scherer J 1997 The actual and perceived effects of floodplain land use regulations on property values in London Ontario Canadian Geographer 41 166 178 Tobin G and Montz B 1997 Natural Hazards Explanation and Integration New York Guilford Press Wescoat J L 2006 Gilbert Fowler White 1911 2006 wisdom in environmental geography Geographical Review 96 4 700 710 External links EditGilbert F White receives the 2000 National Academy of Sciences Public Welfare Medal Natural Hazards Center web site made for Gilbert F White Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gilbert F White amp oldid 1146848541, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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