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8 - The Next Decade of Climate Security Research

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2022

Joshua W. Busby
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Austin
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Summary

The penultimate chapter explores the future of academic inquiry on climate and security and how the field of international relations ought to change. I explore several areas where the climate security field will need to develop new approaches and insights, mostly related to the challenges of writing about the future. This includes: how academics can be useful to policy and the need to move beyond the simple phrase of “thread multiplier”; the significance of the end of “stationarity” and what that means for scholarship going forward; the question of what baselines we use for identifying normal climatic conditions and how far back we can go to identify deep structural drivers; that scholars need to explore more fully the links between human security and state security; and that runaway climate change would make all of these security challenges worse and, hence, mitigation needs to be considered a security concern in its own right. Finally, I suggest that the broader field of political science needs to elevate climate change to a systemic structural factor like anarchy and think about what this means for the discipline and for the world.

Type
Chapter
Information
States and Nature
The Effects of Climate Change on Security
, pp. 244 - 265
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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