The securitisation of climate change : actors, processes and consequences

The securitisation of climate change : actors, processes and consequences
Title : The securitisation of climate change : actors, processes and consequences [1st edition]
Author : Thomas Diez Franziskus von Lucke Zehra Wellmann
Type : Book
Publisher : Routledge - 2016
Subjects
  • Climate change - Political aspect

  • Climate change - Government policy

  • National security - Environmental aspects

Call No. (AUMARK) : 363.738747 (DIS)
ACCNO : 6794

Bibliography : 'The Securitisation of Climate Change is a welcome... ...

Bibliography : 'The Securitisation of Climate Change is a welcome and important contribution to the literature. The authors provide detailed empirical analysis of the way securitisation practices play out in a range of national settings, and make the important point that the different forms of linking climate change and security are crucial to the types of practices securitisation encourages. In the process, this book not only provides much needed empirical depth and theoretical nuance to literature on climate security, it also makes a broader contribution to debates about the construction of security- and the normative implications of this construction- in international relations.' -- Matt McDonald, University of Queensland, Australia 'In addressing the great challenge of our time, The Securitisation of Climate Change brings unprecedented analytical sensitivity, nuance and breadth to the politics of climate change. Reflecting the fascinating diversity of securitizations exposed in their comparative study, the authors compellingly advance the conceptual and ethical frontiers of securitization theory.' -- Stefan Elbe, University of Sussex, UK? 'The Securitisation of Climate Change is a great read for anyone seeking to understand how and why climate change gets connected to ideas of security. Cross-country comparisons provide a sophisticated look at the variation in ways that climate change-security links are made by actors in different political, economic and social contexts. The authors provide some much-needed depth to existing debates while remaining accessible to readers.' -- Nicole Detraz, University of Memphis, USA