Climate Conflict

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A01=Jeffrey Mazo
abrupt
Abrupt Climate Change
adaptation strategies
adaptive
Author_Jeffrey Mazo
capacity
Category=JW
change
Chronic
Climate Change
climate-driven societal instability
CNA
CNA Corporation
darfur
De Waal
Drastic Emissions Reductions
environmental security
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
EU Summit
fragile
Fragile States
Greenhouse Gases
historical climate impacts
IPCC Author
IPCC's Synthesis
IPCC’s Synthesis
Medieval Warm Period
multiplier
Overburden
political ecology
resource conflict analysis
security
Socio-economic Development
Socioeconomic Development
SPLA
SRES Scenario
Sri LANKA
state failure risk
states
Strategic Import
Sudan Liberation Army
threat
UK Treasury
UN
Unmitigated Climate Change
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138452527
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Climate change has been a key factor in the rise and fall of societies and states from prehistory to the recent fighting in the Sudanese state of Darfur. It drives instability, conflict and collapse, but also expansion and reorganisation. The ways cultures have met the climate challenge provide lessons for how the modern world can handle the new security threats posed by unprecedented global warming.

Combining historical precedents with current thinking on state stability, internal conflict and state failure suggests that overcoming cultural, social, political and economic barriers to successful adaptation to a changing climate is the most important factor in avoiding instability in a warming world. The countries which will face increased risk are not necessarily the most fragile, nor those which will suffer the greatest physical effects of climate change.

The global security threat posed by fragile and failing states is well known. It is in the interest of the worlds more affluent countries to take measures both to reduce the degree of global warming and climate change and to cushion the impact in those parts of the world where climate change will increase that threat. Neither course of action will be cheap, but inaction will be costlier. Providing the right kind of assistance to the people and places it is most needed is one way of reducing the cost, and understanding how and why different societies respond to climate change is one way of making that possible.

Jeffrey Mazo is Managing Editor of Survival: Global Politics and Strategy , the bi-monthly journal of the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

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