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Divided Environments: An International Political Ecology of Climate Change, Water and Security

Autor Jan Selby, Gabrielle Daoust, Clemens Hoffmann
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 sep 2022
"That anthropogenic climate change is one of the foremost twenty-first century global security challenges is a view now firmly, if rather superficially, ensconced within Western liberal public and policy discourse. National security strategies have depicted it as 'an urgent and growing threat' and possibly 'the greatest challenge' there is to global stability, potentially presaging a 'breakdown of the rules-based international system' and a 're-emergence of major inter-state conflict.' Foreign ministers have labelled it 'perhaps the twenty-first century's biggest foreign policy challenge,' and 'the world's most fearsome weapon of mass destruction,' and claimed that 'the threat that a changing climate presents to ... international peace and security cannot be underestimated.' Climate change ministers have argued that 'we need to be ready for a world where climate instability drives political instability,' and that a 'world where climate change goes unchallenged will be a Hobbesian world, where life for far more people is "nasty, brutish, and short".' The United States (US) Congress and Pentagon have both described climate change as a threat to US national security. Successive United Nations (UN) Secretary Generals have called climate change 'the defining threat of our time' and 'the pre-eminent geopolitical and economic issue of the twenty-first century'. Activist movements from Extinction Rebellion (XR) to Greenpeace have characterised it as 'an unprecedented global emergency' that puts us 'in a life or death situation of our own making', and as 'the world's biggest threat ... ranked close to weapons of mass destruction in terms of potential impact' (indeed, one of the co-founders of XR has claimed that climate change is already 'turning whole regions of the world into death zones' and that a climate change-induced 'global holocaust ... is already underway'). And figures from Barack Obama to Russell Brand, among many others, have suggested that climate change is a bigger threat than terrorism"
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781009107600
ISBN-10: 1009107607
Pagini: 300
Dimensiuni: 152 x 228 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Locul publicării:Cambridge, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Preface: 1. Introduction; 2. Geography versus demography; 3. Drought; 4. Others; 5. Hydraulics; 6. Frontiers; 7. War; 8. Peace; 9. Transformations and circulations; 10. Conclusions.

Recenzii

'Political ecology is going international! In this path-breaking book, the authors demonstrate beyond reasonable doubt how environmental conditions, in particular water and climate, co-shape international political (in)security. Drawing on the traditions of political ecology and international relations, the authors carefully weave a tapestry of sophisticated conceptual argumentation and detailed empirical analysis that opens the way for an urgently needed international political ecology. Divided Environments should be taken very seriously indeed by anyone concerned with how environmental conditions intersect with questions of political power, inter-state relations and socio-ecological (in)security.' Erik Swyngedouw, University of Manchester
'Divided Environments is engaged scholarship of the highest order and significance. Analytically rigorous and grounded in five illuminating case studies, the book challenges the racist stereotypes, alarmist policy narratives and simplistic scarcity models that have dominated the climate, water and security field to date. Step by step, theme by theme, the authors articulate an international political ecology that puts into dynamic interplay processes of resource extraction, capitalist expansion, state-building and environmental change. Clearly written and convincingly argued, Divided Environments is essential reading for those seeking a clearer understanding of the complex relationships between environment, development, conflict and climate change.' Betsy Hartmann, Hampshire College
Drawing on five rich empirical cases, Divided Environments offers necessary clarity and excellent insights into the murky and often intentionally skewed debates around climate change, water and security. It should be read by anyone involved in the powerful politics around climate and water (in)security, as well as scholars of political ecology, environmental governance and geography. Farhana Sultana, Syracuse University
'What Selby and co-authors achieve in this book is of the greatest importance. They decisively expose the naivety of climate reductionism, so evident in popular accounts of climate conflicts and water wars, and replace it with a framework of understanding they call 'international political ecology'. Their argument is richly and authoritatively grounded in five regional cases drawn from the Middle East and north Africa. This is work of the highest scholarship, with huge significance for how we should think, talk and act about the risks of climate change.' Mike Hulme, University of Cambridge
'A treasure of a book.' Robert Vitalis, University of Pennsylvania
'Drawing on political ecology, this illuminating study unveils the security implications of water development and climate change in Cyprus, Lake Chad, Palestine, South Sudan and Syria, and traces how the legacies of colonialism, violent capitalism, racialised development and predatory states, rather than climate change, drive environmental vulnerabilities and conflict. A critical counter-narrative to mainstream discourse on climate security, and a highly recommended contribution to the debate about water resources and conflict.' Marwa Daoudy, Georgetown University
'Divided Environments is a much-needed critical analysis of the idea that climate change causes conflicts, that demonstrates how this idea is empirically flawed and rooted in Eurocentric myths about colonised people and their environments.' Tor A. Benjaminsen, Norwegian University of Life Sciences
'This is a book that will make people sit up and think.' Mark Zeitoun, University of East Anglia
'For International Relations to productively contribute to the climate challenge, scholars in the field must interrogate the assumptions and oversimplified analyses which are frequently attached to climate security and climate change politics. This important book highlights and corrects key climate-related claims and is a must-read text for not only climate change activists and policy-makers but for all IR researchers!' Milja Kurki, Aberystwyth University

Notă biografică


Descriere

An original 'international political ecology' analysis of the implications of climate change and water scarcity for twenty-first-century conflict and security.