In a usability test of a pre-commercialization product designed to minimize interruptions, we examined the ease of use and intuitiveness of the product through lab testing, while also surveying test participants on their perception of interruptions in the workplace. The results suggest that despite high ratings of ease of use and tool intuitiveness, participants were uncertain about likelihood of use in the office context. This discrepancy indicates usability is perhaps a necessary but insufficient driver of adoption, and other factors, such as the establishment of a receptive context and supportive social norms, are also important considerations when predicting new technological adoptions.
This symposium collection in Transnational Environmental Law (TEL) considers prospects for progress on global climate change policy under the assumption that the United States (US), or another critical national actor, will not meaningfully participate in any international climate change mitigation regime. Almost without exception lawmakers, diplomats, academics, and other interested parties discuss global climate change policy under the assumption that robust US participation is necessary to achieve successan understandable view, given that as much as 20% of annual global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are attributable to the US. 1 Meanwhile, for the better part of the last two decades, US ambivalence and at times outright hostility towards climate change policy have impeded the development of a robust international regime. The national US political situationfrom the disincentives for bipartisan compromise in a winner-takes-all two-party system, to the de facto super-majority requirement for the passage of legislative bills in the Senate, to the contorted alignment necessary to secure agreement between the House, the Senate and the Presidentmake it reasonable to wonder if the US could ever adopt the kinds of robust and transformative policy declared to be necessary by much of the climate change policy community.
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