Mendelsohn, RobertDinar, Ariel2012-08-132012-08-132005-07https://hdl.handle.net/10986/9661Scientists are confident of a link between greenhouse gas emissions, the increasing concentration of those gases in the atmosphere, and climate change. However, the final impacts from climate change are difficult to estimate, since we have no direct experience with new climates. Past climate change has been small and slow, making the impacts hard to discern. Further, technological changes have obscured signals from historic climate changes. Despite these difficulties, the impact literature has made many strides toward understanding and quantifying climatic impacts.CC BY 3.0 IGOABATEMENTACCESS TO IRRIGATIONAGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITYAGRICULTURAL SECTORAGRICULTURAL SERVICESATMOSPHERECLIMATECLIMATE CHANGECLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATIONCLIMATE CHANGESCLIMATE EFFECTSCLIMATE IMPACTSCLIMATE VARIABLESCLIMATE ZONESCLIMATIC CHANGECOCONCENTRATIONSEMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIESFARMERSFLOODSFORESTSGDPGLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGEGLOBAL WARMINGGREENHOUSE GASGREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONSGREENHOUSE GASESHURRICANESIRRIGATIONIRRIGATION PROJECTSLACK OF INFORMATIONMONSOONSPOORPOOR FARMERSPOTENTIAL IMPACTSPRECIPITATIONRESTRICTIONSRISK MANAGEMENTRIVERSRURALRURAL ACTIVITIESRURAL AREASRURAL COMMUNITIESRURAL DEVELOPMENTRURAL ECONOMYRURAL INCOMERURAL POORRURAL POVERTYRURAL REGIONSSATELLITESSOILSOILSTEMPERATURETEMPERATURE DATAWARMING POLICYWEATHERWEATHER STATIONSExploring Adaptation to Climate Change in Agriculture : The Potential of Cross-Sectional AnalysisWorld Bank10.1596/9661