Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T06:16:34.032Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

References

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 September 2021

Matt McDonald
Affiliation:
University of Queensland
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Ecological Security
Climate Change and the Construction of Security
, pp. 199 - 231
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abrahams, Daniel (2019) ‘From Discourse to Policy: US Policy Communities’ Perceptions of and Approaches to Climate Change and Security’, Conflict, Security and Development, 19:4, pp. 323–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abrahamsen, Rita (2002) ‘Blair’s Africa: The Politics of Securitization and Fear’, Alternatives, 30:1, pp. 5580.Google Scholar
Ackerman, Alice (2003) ‘The Idea and Practice of Conflict Prevention’, Journal of Peace Research, 40:3, pp. 339–47.Google Scholar
Ackerman, Frank (2008) ‘Hot, It’s Not’, Climatic Change, 89, pp. 435–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adger, W. Neil (2006) ‘Vulnerability’, Global Environmental Change, 16, pp. 268–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adger, W. Neil, Brown, Katrina and Waters, James (2011) ‘Resilience’, in Dryzek, John, Norgaard, Richard and Schlosberg, David eds., The Oxford Handbook of Climate Change and Society (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 696710.Google Scholar
Adler, Emanuel and Pouliot, Vincent (2011) International Practices (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Adler-Nissen, Rebecca (2013) Bourdieu in International Relations (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Agarwal, A. and Narain, S. (1991) Global Warming in an Unequal World: A Case of Environmental Colonialism (New Delhi: Centre for Science and the Environment).Google Scholar
Agnew, John (1998) Geopolitics: Re-visioning World Politics (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Aldred, Jonathan (2012) ‘The Ethics of Emissions Trading’, New Political Economy, 17:3, pp. 339–60.Google Scholar
Alley, R. et al. (2001) ‘Abrupt Climate Change’, Science, 299:5615, pp. 2005–10.Google Scholar
Angus, Ian (2015) ‘Hijacking the Anthropocene’, Climate and Capitalism, 19 May. Available at https://climateandcapitalism.com/2015/05/19/hijacking-the-anthropocene/Google Scholar
Anievas, Alexander, Manchanda, Nivi and Shilliam, Robbie eds. (2015) Race and Racism in International Relations (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Antonio, Robert (1981) ‘Immanent Critique as the Core of Critical Theory’, British Journal of Sociology, 32:2, pp. 330–45.Google Scholar
Aradau, Claudia (2008) ‘Forget Equality? Security and Liberty in the “War on Terror”’, Alternatives, 33:3, pp. 293314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aradau, Claudia and Van Munster, Rens (2007) ‘Governing Terrorism through Risk’, European Journal of International Relations, 13:1, pp. 89115.Google Scholar
Archer, Margaret (2003) Structure, Agency and the Internal Conversation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Asian Development Bank (ADB) (2012) Addressing Climate Change & Migration in Asia & the Pacific (Manila: ADB).Google Scholar
Ayoob, Mohammed (1997) ‘Defining Security: A Subaltern Realist Perspective’, in Krause, Keith and Williams, Michael C. eds., Critical Security Studies: Concepts and Cases (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press), pp. 121–46.Google Scholar
Baker, Aryn (2015) ‘How Climate Change Is Behind the Surge of Migrants to Europe’, Time Magazine, 7 September. Available at http://time.com/4024210/climate-change-migrants/Google Scholar
Baldwin, David A. (1997) ‘The Concept of Security’, Review of International Studies, 23, pp. 526.Google Scholar
Balzacq, Thierry (2005) ‘The Three Faces of Securitization’, European Journal of International Relations, 11:2, pp. 171201.Google Scholar
Balzacq, Thierry ed. (2010) Securitization Theory (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Balzacq, Thierry, Guzzini, Stefano, Williams, Michael, Wæver, Ole and Heikki, Patomäki eds. (2015) ‘What Kind of Theory – If Any – Is Securitization?’, International Relations, 29:1, pp. 96136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barbosa, Luis C. (2000) The Brazilian Amazon Rainforest (Lanham, MD: University Press of America).Google Scholar
Barkawi, Tarak and Laffey, Mark (2006) ‘The Postcolonial Moment in Security Studies’, Review of International Studies, 32:2, pp. 329–52.Google Scholar
Barnett, Jon (2000) ‘Destabilizing the Environment-Conflict Thesis’, Review of International Studies, 26, pp. 271–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnett, Jon (2001) The Meaning of Environmental Security (London: Zed Books).Google Scholar
Barnett, Jon (2018) ‘Global Environmental Change I: Climate Resilient Peace?’, Progress in Human Geography. Online first: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0309132518798077Google Scholar
Barnett, Jon and Adger, Neil (2007) ‘Climate Change, Human Security and Violent Conflict’, Political Geography, 26:6, pp. 639–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnett, Jon et al. (2010) ‘Global Environmental Change and Human Security’, in Matthew, Richard et al. eds., Global Environmental Change and Human Security (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press), pp. 332.Google Scholar
Barry, John and Eckersley, Robyn eds. (2005) The State and the Global Ecological Crisis (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press).Google Scholar
Beardsley, Kyle, Cunningham, David and White, Peter (2017) ‘Resolving Civil Wars before They Start’, British Journal of Political Science, 47:3, pp. 675–97.Google Scholar
Beckman, Ludvig (2008) ‘Do Global Climate Change and the Interest of Future Generations Have Implications for Democracy?’, Environmental Politics, 17:4, pp. 610–24.Google Scholar
Beeson, Mark (2010) ‘The Coming of Environmental Authoritarianism’, Environmental Politics, 19:2, pp. 276–94.Google Scholar
Beeson, Mark (2019) Environmental Populism (London: Palgrave).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beitz, Charles (1999) Political Theory and International Relations (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press).Google Scholar
Bellamy, Alex J. (2014) The Responsibility to Protect: A Defence (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Bellamy, Alex J. and McDonald, Matt (2004) ‘Securing International Society: Towards an English School Discourse of Security’, Australian Journal of Political Science, 39:2, pp. 303–30.Google Scholar
Bellamy, Alex J. and Dunne, Tim eds. (2016) The Oxford Handbook of the Responsibility to Protect (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Bennett, Jane (2010) Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things (Durham: Duke University Press).Google Scholar
Bergin, Anthony et al. (2013) Heavy Weather: Climate Change & the Australian Defence Force (Canberra: ASPI, Special Report 49).Google Scholar
Bertrand, Sarah (2018) ‘Can the Subaltern Securitize?’, European Journal of International Security, 3:3, pp. 281–99.Google Scholar
Betsill, Michele and Bulkeley, Harriet (2005) ‘Transnational Networks and Global Environmental Governance’, International Studies Quarterly, 48:2, pp. 471–93.Google Scholar
Betsill, Michele and Bulkeley, Harriet (2006) ‘Cities and the Multilevel Governance of Global Climate Change’, Global Governance, 12, pp. 141–59.Google Scholar
Betts, Alexander and Orchard, Phil eds. (2014) Implementation and World Politics: How International Norms Change Practice (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank (2014) Earth System Governance: World Politics in the Anthropocene (Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank (2018) ‘Politics for a New Earth: Governing in the Anthropocene’, in Nicholson, Simon and Jinnah, Sikina eds., New Earth Politics: Essays from the Anthropocene (Cambridge: MIT Press), pp. 405–20.Google Scholar
Biermann, Frank and Boas, Ingrid (2010) ‘Preparing for a Warmer World: Towards a Global Governance System to Protect Climate Refugees’, Global Environmental Politics, 10:1, pp. 6088.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bigo, Didier (2002) ‘Security and Immigration: Towards a Critique of the Governmentality of Unease’, Alternatives, 27 (Special Issue, 2002), pp. 6392.Google Scholar
Bigo, Didier (2011) ‘Pierre Bourdieu and International Relations: Power of Practices, Practices of Power’, International Political Sociology, 5:3, pp. 22558.Google Scholar
Blue, Gwendolyn (2015) ‘Public Deliberation with Climate Change’, Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law, 24:2, pp. 152–9.Google Scholar
Boas, Ingrid (2015) Climate Migration & Security (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Boas, Ingrid and Rothe, Delf (2015) ‘From Conflict to Resilience? Explaining Recent Changes in Climate Security Discourse and Practice’, Environmental Politics, 25:4, pp. 613–32.Google Scholar
Bookchin, Murray (1987) ‘Social Ecology versus Deep Ecology: A Challenge for the Ecology Movement’, Green Perspectives: Newsletter of the Green Program Project, nos. 4–5 (Summer).Google Scholar
Booth, Ken (1991) ‘Security and Emancipation’, Review of International Studies, 17:4, pp. 313–26.Google Scholar
Booth, Ken (2007) Theory of World Security (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Bourbeau, Philippe (2015) ‘Resilience and International Politics’, International Studies Review, 17:3, pp. 374–95.Google Scholar
Bourbeau, Philippe (2018) On Resilience: Genealogy, Logics and World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre (1977) Outline of a Theory of Practice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre (1990) In Other Words: Essays towards a Reflexive Sociology (Stanford: Stanford University Press).Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre (1991) Language and Symbolic Power, edited by Thompson, John and translated by Raymond, Gino and Adamson, Matthew (Cambridge: Polity).Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre (1992) An Invitation to Reflexive Sociology (Chicago: University of Chicago Press).Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre and Wacquant, Loic (1992) Invitation to a Reflexive Sociology (Chicago: University of Chicago Press).Google Scholar
Breen-Smyth, Marie (2014) ‘Theorising the “Suspect Community”’, Critical Studies on Terrorism, 7:2, pp. 223–40.Google Scholar
Brighouse, Harry and Swift, Adam (2006) ‘Equality, Priority and Positional Goods’, Ethics, 116:3, pp. 471–97.Google Scholar
Brown, Lester (1977) ‘Redefining National Security’, Worldwatch Paper 14 (Washington, DC: Worldwatch Institute).Google Scholar
Brown, Lester (1986) ‘Redefining National Security’, in Brown, et al. eds., State of the World 1986 (New York: Norton), pp. 195212.Google Scholar
Brown, Oli, Hammill, Anne and McLeman, Robert (2007) ‘Climate Change as the “New” Security Threat: Implications for Africa’, International Affairs, 83:6, pp. 1141–54.Google Scholar
Browning, Chris and McDonald, Matt (2013) ‘The Future of Critical Security Studies: Ethics and the Politics of Security’, European Journal of International Relations, 19:2, pp. 235–55.Google Scholar
Bulkeley, Harriet and Betsill, Michele (2010) ‘Rethinking Sustainable Cities’, Environmental Politics, 14:1, pp. 4263.Google Scholar
Bulkeley, Harriet and Newell, Peter (2015) Governing Climate Change (London: Routledge).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bulkeley, Harriet et al. (2014) Transnational Climate Change Governance (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Bull, Hedley (1995) The Anarchical Society, 2nd ed. (London: Macmillan).Google Scholar
Burke, Anthony (2001) In Fear of Security: Australia’s Invasion Anxiety (Sydney: Pluto Press).Google Scholar
Burke, Anthony (2013) ‘Security Cosmopolitanism’, Critical Studies on Security, 1:1, pp. 1328.Google Scholar
Burke, Anthony (2019) ‘Blue Screen Biosphere: The Absent Presence of Biodiversity in International Law’, International Political Sociology, 13:3, pp. 333–51.Google Scholar
Burke, Anthony and Fishel, Stefanie (2019) ‘Power, World Politics, and Thing-Systems in the Anthropocene’, in Biermann, Frank and Lövbrand, Eva eds., Anthropocene Encounters: New Directions in Green Political Thinking (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 87108.Google Scholar
Burke, Anthony, Lee-Koo, Katrina and McDonald, Matt (2014) Ethics and Global Security (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Burke, Anthony et al. (2016) ‘Planet Politics: A Manifesto from the End of IR’, Millennium, 44:3, pp. 499523.Google Scholar
Burke, Sharon and Parthemore, Christine eds. (2008) A Strategy for American Power: Energy, Climate and National Security (Washington, DC: Center for a New American Century).Google Scholar
Busby, Joshua (2007) ‘Climate Change and National Security: An Agenda for Action’, Council of Foreign Relations Report (Washington, DC: Council of Foreign Relations).Google Scholar
Busby, Joshua (2008) ‘Who Cares about the Weather? Climate Change and US National Security’, Security Studies, 17:3, pp. 468504.Google Scholar
Busby, Joshua (2018). ‘Taking Stock: The Field of Climate and Security’, Current Climate Change Reports, 4, pp. 338–46.Google Scholar
Buxton, Nick and Hayes, Ben (2015) ‘Introduction: Security for Whom in a Time of Climate Crisis’, in Buxton, and Hayes, eds., The Secure and the Dispossessed (London: Pluto), pp. 119.Google Scholar
Buzan, Barry (2004) From International to World Society? (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Buzan, Barry (2015) ‘The English School: A Neglected Approach to International Security Studies’, Security Dialogue, 46:2, pp. 126–43.Google Scholar
Buzan, Barry and Gonzalez-Palaez, Ana (2005) ‘“International Community” after Iraq’, International Affairs, 81:1, pp. 3152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buzan, Barry and Hansen, Lene (2009) The Evolution of International Security Studies (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Buzan, Barry and Wæver, Ole (2003) Regions and Powers (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Buzan, Barry, Wæver, Ole and Wilde, Jaap de (1998) Security: A New Framework for Analysis (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner).Google Scholar
Cabrera, Luis ed. (2018) Institutional Cosmopolitanism (Oxford: Oxford University Press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campbell, David (1992) Writing Security: United States Foreign Policy and the Politics of Identity (London: UCL Press).Google Scholar
Campbell, Kurt ed. (2008) Climate Cataclysm: The Foreign Policy and National Security Implications of Climate Change (Washington, DC: Brookings Institute).Google Scholar
Caney, Simon (2005) ‘Cosmopolitan Justice, Responsibility and Global Climate Change’, Leiden Journal of International Law, 18, pp. 747–75.Google Scholar
Caney, Simon (2010a) ‘Cosmopolitanism’, in Bell, Duncan ed., Ethics and World Politics (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 146–63.Google Scholar
Caney, Simon (2010b) ‘Markets, Morality and Climate Change’, New Political Economy, 15:2, pp. 197224.Google Scholar
Cannon, Terry and Muller-Mahn, Detlef (2010) ‘Vulnerability, Resilience and Development Discourses in Context of Climate Change’, Natural Hazards, 55:3, pp. 621–35.Google Scholar
Carrington, Damian (2018) ‘Humanity Has Wiped Out 60% of Animal Populations Since 1970, Report Finds’, The Guardian, 30 October. Available at www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/oct/30/humanity-wiped-out-animals-since-1970-major-report-findsGoogle Scholar
Carrington, Damian (2019) ‘“Climate Apartheid”: UN Expert Says Human Rights May Not Survive’, The Guardian, 25 June. Available at www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/jun/25/climate-apartheid-united-nations-expert-says-human-rights-may-not-survive-crisisGoogle Scholar
Cavalieri, Paola (2012) ‘Do We Need Continental Philosophy? Nonhumans, Ethics, and the Complexity of Reality’, The New Centennial Review, 11:2, pp. 83113.Google Scholar
Cavelty, Myriam Dunn, Kaufmann, Mareile and Kristensen, Kristian Soby (2015) ‘Resilience and (In)security: Practices, Subjects, Temporalities’, Security Dialogue, 46:1, pp. 314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Celermajer, Danielle et al. (2021) ‘Multispecies Justice: Theories, Challenges and a Research Agenda for Environmental Politics’, Environmental Politics, 30:1–2, pp. 119–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chandler, David (2004) ‘The Responsibility to Protect? Imposing the Liberal Peace’, International Peacekeeping, 11:1, pp. 5981.Google Scholar
Chandler, David (2013) ‘The World of Attachments? The Post-humanist Challenge to Freedom and Necessity’, Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 41:3, pp. 51634.Google Scholar
Chandler, David (2014) Resilience: The Governance of Complexity (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Chandler, David (2018) Ontopolitics in the Anthropocene (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Chandler, David (2019) ‘The Transvaluation of Critique in the Anthropocene’, Global Society, 33:1, pp. 2644.Google Scholar
Chandler, David and Hynek, Nik eds. (2011) Critical Perspectives on Human Security (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Chandler, David and Hynek, Nik (2013) ‘No Emancipatory Alternative, No Critical Security Studies’, Critical Studies on Security, 1:1, pp. 4663.Google Scholar
Chandler, David, Müller, Franziska and Rothe, Delf eds. (2021) International Relations in the Anthropocene (London: Palgrave).Google Scholar
Chaturvedi, Sanjay and Doyle, Timothy (2015) Climate Terror (London: Palgrave).Google Scholar
Chowdhry, Geeta and Nair, Sheila eds. (2004) Power, Postcolonialism and International Relations (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Christie, Ryerson (2010) ‘Critical Voices and Human Security: To Endure, to Engage or to Critique?Security Dialogue, 41:2, pp. 169–90.Google Scholar
Christoff, Peter (2013) ‘Climate Discourse Complexes, National Climate Regimes and Australian Climate Policy’, Australian Journal of Politics and History, 59:3, pp. 349–67.Google Scholar
Christoff, Peter ed. (2013) Four Degrees of Global Warming: Australia in a Hot World (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Christoff, Peter (2016) ‘The Promissory Note: COP21 and the Paris Climate Agreement’, Environmental Politics, 25:5, pp. 765–87.Google Scholar
Ciplet, David, Roberts, J. Timmons and Khan, Mizan (2013) ‘The Politics of International Climate Adaptation Funding’, Global Environmental Politics, 13:1, pp. 4968.Google Scholar
Clark, Brett and York, Richard (2005) ‘Carbon Metabolism: Global Capitalism, Climate Change, and the Biospheric Rift’, Theory and Society, 34:4, pp. 391428.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, Nigel (2014) ‘Geo-politics and the Disaster of the Anthropocene’, The Sociological Review, 62:S1, pp. 1937.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clift, Ben and Tomlinson, Jim (2010) ‘When Rules Started to Rule: The IMF, Neo-liberal Economic Ideas and Economic Policy Change in Britain’, Review of International Political Economy, 19:3, pp. 477500.Google Scholar
CNA (2007) National Security and the Threat of Climate Change (Washington, DC: CNA). Available at http://securityandclimate.cna.org/report/Google Scholar
CNA (2014) National Security and the Accelerating Risks of Climate Change. May. Available at www.cna.org/cna_files/pdf/MAB_5-8-14.pdfGoogle Scholar
Cole, Matthew A. (2003) ‘Environmental Optimists, Environmental Pessimists, and the Real World’, The Economic Journal, 113:48, pp. 362–80.Google Scholar
Conca, Ken (2015) An Unfinished Foundation: The United Nations and Global Environmental Governance (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Conca, Ken (2019) ‘Is There a Role for the UN Security Council on Climate Change?’, Environment, 61:1, pp. 415.Google Scholar
Conca, Ken and Dabelko, Geoffrey (2002) Environmental Peacemaking (Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson Center Press).Google Scholar
Conca, Ken, Thwaites, Joe and Lee, Goueun (2017) ‘Climate Change and the UN Security Council’, Global Environmental Politics, 17:2, pp. 120.Google Scholar
Constantinou, Costas (2000) ‘Poetics of Security’, Alternatives, 25:3, pp. 287306.Google Scholar
Corner, Adam and Pidgeon, Nick (2010) ‘Geoengineering the Climate: The Social and Ethical Implications’, Environment, 52:1, pp. 2437.Google Scholar
Corry, Olaf (2012) ‘Securitization & Riskification’, Millennium, 40:2, pp. 23558.Google Scholar
Corry, Olaf (2014) ‘From Defense to Resilience: Environmental Security beyond Neo-liberalism’, International Political Sociology, 8:3, pp. 256–74.Google Scholar
Corry, Olaf (2017) ‘The International Politics of Geoengineering: The Feasibility of Plan B for Tackling Climate Change’, Security Dialogue, 48:4, pp. 297315.Google Scholar
Cousins, Stephanie (2013) ‘UN Security Council: Playing a Role in the International Climate Change Regime?’, Global Change, Peace and Security, 25:2, pp. 191210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cranenburgh, Nadine (2019) ‘Solar Energy Is on the Rise, as Coal-Fired Power Stations Age and Gas Prices Rise’, ABC News, 10 May. Available at www.abc.net.au/news/science/2019-05-10/solar-energy-power-grid-renewables-policy/11088002Google Scholar
Cripps, Elizabeth (2013) Climate Change and the Moral Agent (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Croucher, Ashleigh and McDonald, Matt (2014) ‘Contesting the International: UNSC Debates on Climate Change and the Politics of International Security’, Paper presented at Oceanic Conference on International Studies, Melbourne, July.Google Scholar
Cudworth, Erika (2014) ‘Feminism’, in Death, Carl ed., Critical Environmental Politics (London: Routledge), pp. 91100.Google Scholar
Cudworth, Erika and Hobden, Stephen (2011) ‘Beyond Environmental Security: Complex Systems, Multiple Inequalities and Environmental Risks’, Environmental Politics, 20:1, pp. 4259.Google Scholar
Cudworth, Erika and Hobden, Stephen (2013) ‘Complexity, Ecologism and Posthuman Politics’, Review of International Studies, 39:3, pp. 643–64.Google Scholar
Cudworth, Erika and Hobden, Stephen (2015) ‘The Posthuman Way of War’, Security Dialogue, 46:6, pp. 513–29.Google Scholar
Cudworth, Erika and Hobden, Stephen (2017) ‘Post-human Security’, in Burke, and Parker, eds., Global Insecurity: Futures of Global Chaos and Governance (London: Palgrave), pp. 6581.Google Scholar
Cudworth, Erika and Hobden, Stephen (2018) The Emancipatory Project of Posthumanism (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Cunliffe, Philip (2010) ‘Dangerous Duties: Power, Paternalism and the “Responsibility to Protect”’, Review of International Studies, 36:1, pp. 7996.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, Philip (2017) ‘The Doctrine of the “Responsibility to Protect” as a Practice of Political Exceptionalism’, European Journal of International Relations, 23:2, pp. 466–86.Google Scholar
Dalby, Simon (1998) ‘Ecological Metaphors of Security: World Politics in the Biosphere’, Alternatives: Global, Local, Political, 23:2, pp. 291319.Google Scholar
Dalby, Simon (2002) Environmental Security (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press).Google Scholar
Dalby, Simon (2007) ‘Anthropocene Geopolitics: Globalisation, Empire, Environment and Critique’, Geography Compass, 1, pp. 103118.Google Scholar
Dalby, Simon (2009) Security and Environmental Change (Cambridge: Polity).Google Scholar
Dalby, Simon (2015a) ‘Climate Change and the Insecurity Frame’, in O’Lear, Shannon and Dalby, Simon eds., Reframing Climate Change: Constructing Ecological Geopolitics (London: Routledge), pp. 8399.Google Scholar
Dalby, Simon (2015b) ‘Geoengineering: The Next Era of Geopolitics?Geography Compass, 9:4, pp. 190201.Google Scholar
Dalby, Simon (2016) ‘Framing the Anthropocene: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly’, The Anthropocene Review, 3:1, pp. 3351.Google Scholar
Dalby, Simon and Moussavi, Zahra (2017) ‘Environmental Security, Geopolitics and the Case of Lake Urmia’s Disappearance’, Global Change, Peace and Security, 29:1, pp. 3955.Google Scholar
Dalby, Simon and O’Tuathail, Geraid eds. (1998) Rethinking Geopolitics (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Darby, Andrew (2009) ‘Ocean Seeding Fails on Carbon but Plankton Score’, The Sydney Morning Herald, 27 March. Available at www.smh.com.au/environment/climate-change/ocean-seeding-fails-on-carbon-but-plankton-score-20141112-9ces.htmlGoogle Scholar
Decoteau, Claire (2016) ‘The Reflexive Habitus: Critical Realist and Bourdieusian Social Action’, European Journal of Social Theory, 19:3, pp. 303–21.Google Scholar
De Waal, Alex (1997) ‘Anarchy Postponed’, Prospect Magazine, 20 February. Available at https://prospectmagazine.co.uk/magazine/anarchypostponedGoogle Scholar
Deitelhoff, Nicole and Zimmermann, Lisbeth eds. (2019) Norms under Challenge. Special Issue of Journal of Global Security Studies, 4:1, pp. 116.Google Scholar
Deleuze, Gilles (1994) Difference and Repetition, trans Patton, Paul (New York: Columbia University Press).Google Scholar
Dellmuth, Lisa et al. (2017) ‘IGOs and Global Climate Security Challenges’, SIPRI Fact Sheet, December. Available at www.sipri.org/sites/default/files/2017-12/fs_1712_igos_and_climate_security_0.pdfGoogle Scholar
Detraz, Nicole (2009) ‘Environmental Security and Gender: Necessary Shifts in an Evolving Debate’, Security Studies, 18:2, pp. 345–69.Google Scholar
Detraz, Nicole (2015) Environmental Security and Gender (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Detraz, Nicole and Betsill, Michele (2009) ‘Climate Change and Environmental Security: For Whom the Discourse Shifts’, International Studies Perspectives, 10:3, pp. 304–21.Google Scholar
Deudney, Daniel (1990) ‘The Case against Linking Environmental Degradation and National Security’, Millennium, 19:3, pp. 461–73.Google Scholar
Diez, Thomas, von Lucke, Franziskus and Wellmann, Zehra (2016) The Securitization of Climate Change (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Dillon, Michael (1996) Politics of Security: Towards a Philosophy of Continental Thought (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Dillon, Michael and Reid, Julian (2009) The Liberal Way of War: Killing to Make Life Live (London: Routledge).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dobson, Andrew (2010) ‘Democracy and Nature: Speaking and Listening’, Political Studies, 58:4, pp. 752–68.Google Scholar
Dodo, Mahamat (2014) ‘Examining the Potential Impacts of Climate Change on International Security’, SpringerPlus, 3:194, pp. 118.Google Scholar
Doty, Roxanne Lynn (1993) ‘Foreign Policy as Social Construction’, International Studies Quarterly, 37:3, pp. 297320.Google Scholar
Doty, Roxanne (1998–9) ‘Immigration and the Politics of Security’, Security Studies, 8:2–3, pp. 7193.Google Scholar
Dresse, Anais, Fischhendler, Itay, Nielsen, Jonas Ostergaard and Zikos, Dimitrios (2019) ‘Environmental Peacebuilding: Towards a Theoretical Framework’, Cooperation and Conflict, 54:1, pp. 99119.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John (1997) The Politics of the Earth: Environmental Discourses (New York: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Dryzek, John (2005) The Politics of the Earth: Environmental Discourses, 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Dryzek, John (2016) ‘Institutions for the Anthropocene’, British Journal of Political Science, 35:4, pp. 937–56.Google Scholar
Dryzek, John and Pickering, Jonathan (2018) The Politics of the Anthropocene (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Dufek, Pavel (2013) ‘Why Strong Moral Cosmopolitanism Requires a World State’, International Theory, 5:2, pp. 177212.Google Scholar
Duggan, Jill (2015) ‘Has the EU’s Carbon Trading System Made Business Greener?’, The Guardian, 16 July. Available at www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/2015/jul/15/eu-carbon-trading-system-made-business-greenerGoogle Scholar
Dumaine, Carol and Mintzer, Irving (2015) ‘Confronting Climate Change and Reframing Security’, SAIS Review of International Affairs, 35:1, pp. 516.Google Scholar
Dunlop, Ian and Spratt, David (2017) Disaster Alley: Climate Change, Conflict & Risk (Melbourne: Breakthrough). Available at www.breakthroughonline.org.au/disasteralleyGoogle Scholar
Dunn, Kevin C. and Neumann, Iver (2016) Undertaking Discourse Analysis for Social Research (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press).Google Scholar
Dunne, Tim (1998) Inventing International Society (London: Macmillan).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dupont, Alan (2008) ‘The Strategic Implications of Climate Change’, Survival, 50:3, pp. 2954.Google Scholar
Easterly, William (2009) ‘The Ideology of Development’, Foreign Policy, July/August.Google Scholar
Eckersley, Robyn (1992) Environmentalism and Political Theory: Toward and Ecocentric Approach (Albany: State University New York Press).Google Scholar
Eckersley, Robyn (2004) The Green State: Rethinking Democracy and Sovereignty (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press).Google Scholar
Eckersley, Robyn (2005) ‘Ecocentric Discourses: Problems and Future Prospects for Nature Advocacy’, in Dryzek, John and Schlosberg, David eds., Debating the Earth: A Reader, 2nd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 399407.Google Scholar
Eckersley, Robyn (2007) ‘Ecological Intervention: Prospects and Limits’, Ethics and International Affairs, 21:3, pp. 275–96.Google Scholar
Eckersley, Robyn (2017) ‘Geopolitan Democracy in the Anthropocene’, Political Studies, 65:4, pp. 983–99.Google Scholar
Elliott, Lorraine (2006) ‘Cosmopolitan Environmental Harm Conventions’, Global Society, 20:3, pp. 345–63.Google Scholar
Eroukhmanoff, Clara and Harker, Matt eds. (2017) Reflections on the Posthuman in International Relations (Bristol: E-International Relations).Google Scholar
Erskine, Toni (2003) Can Institutions Have Responsibilities? (Berlin: Springer).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Erskine, Toni (2008) ‘The Problem of Moral Agency in International Relations’, in Reus-Smit, Christian and Snidal, Duncan eds., Oxford Handbook of International Relations (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 699707.Google Scholar
Evans, Brad and Reid, Julian (2014) Resilient Life: The Art of Living Dangerously (Cambridge: Polity).Google Scholar
Fagan, Madeleine (2016a) ‘Security in the Anthropocene’, European Journal of International Relations, 23:2, pp. 292314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Falkner, Robert (2016b) ‘The Paris Agreement and the New Logic of International Climate Politics’, International Affairs, 92:5, pp. 1107–25.Google Scholar
Fagan, Madeleine (2019) ‘On the Dangers of an Anthropocene Epoch’, Political Geography, 70, pp. 5563.Google Scholar
Far, Shahrazad and Youngs, Richard (2018). ‘The EU’s Distinctive Approach to Climate Security’, in Scott, Shirley and Ku, Charlotte eds., Climate Change and the UN Security Council (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar), pp. 147–61.Google Scholar
Farrell, Clare, Green, Alison, Knights, Sam and Skeaping, William eds. (2019) This Is Not a Drill: An Extinction Rebellion Handbook (London: Penguin).Google Scholar
Ferguson, Peter (2019) ‘Discourses of Resilience in the Climate Security Debate’, Global Environmental Politics, 19:2, pp. 104–26.Google Scholar
Fierke, Karin M. (1998) Changing Games, Changing Strategies: Critical Investigations in Security (Manchester: Manchester University Press).Google Scholar
Fierke, Karin M. (2004) ‘Whereof We Can Speak, Thereof We Must Not Be Silent’, Review of International Studies, 30:3, pp. 471–91.Google Scholar
Fisher, P. Brian (2011) ‘Climate Change and Human Security in Tuvalu’, Global Change, Peace and Security, 23:3, pp. 293313.Google Scholar
Floyd, Rita (2010) Security and the Environment (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Floyd, Rita (2015) ‘Global Climate Security Governance: A Case of Institutional and Ideational Fragmentation’, Conflict, Security and Development, 15:2, pp. 119–46.Google Scholar
Floyd, Rita (2019) The Morality of Security: A Theory of Just Securitization (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Floyd, Rita and Matthew, Richard A. (2013) ‘Environmental Security Studies: An Introduction’, in Floyd, and Mattthew, eds., Environmental Security: Approaches and Issues (London: Routledge), pp.120.Google Scholar
Francione, Gary L (2010) ‘Animal Welfare and the Moral Value of Nonhuman Animals’, Law, Culture and the Humanities, 6:1, pp. 2436.Google Scholar
Foucault, Michel (1977) Discipline and Punish (New York: Pantheon Books).Google Scholar
Fuentes-George, Kemi (2017) ‘Consensus, Certainly and Catastrophe: Discourse, Governance and Ocean Iron Fertilization’, Global Environmental Politics, 17:2, pp. 125–43.Google Scholar
Gamble, Andrew (2010) ‘Ethics and Politics’, in Bell, Duncan ed., Ethics and World Politics (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 7392.Google Scholar
Garcia, Denise (2010) ‘Warming to a Redefinition of International Security: The Consolidation of a Norm Concerning Climate Change’, International Relations, 24:3, pp. 271–92.Google Scholar
Gardiner, Stephen M. (2006) ‘A Core Precautionary Principle’, Journal of Political Philosophy, 14:1, pp. 3360.Google Scholar
Gardiner, Stephen M. (2014) ‘A Call for a Global Constitutional Convention Focused on Future Generations’, Ethics and International Affairs, 28:3, pp. 299315.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gardiner, Stephen M., Caney, Simon, Jamieson, Dale and Shue, Henry eds. (2010) Climate Ethics: Essential Readings (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Gelber, Katharine and McDonald, Matt (2006) ‘Ethics and Exclusion: Representations of Sovereignty in Australia’s Approach to Asylum-Seekers’, Review of International Studies, 32:2, pp. 269–89.Google Scholar
Gereke, Marika and Bruhl, Tanja (2019) ‘Unpacking the Unequal Representation of Northern and Southern NGOs in International Climate Change Politics’, Third World Quarterly, 40:5, pp. 870889.Google Scholar
Gibney, Matthew (2004) The Ethics and Politics of Asylum (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Gibney, Matthew (2018) ‘The Ethics of Refugees’, Philosophy Compass, 13:10, p. e12521.Google Scholar
Githens-Mazer, Jonathan and Lambert, Robert (2010) ‘Why Conventional Wisdom on Radicalization Fails’, International Affairs, 86:4, pp. 889901.Google Scholar
Gleditsch, Nils Petter (1998) ‘Armed Conflict and the Environment: A Critique of the Literature’, Journal of Peace Research, 35:3, pp. 381400.Google Scholar
Gleick, Peter (1993) ‘Water and Conflict: Fresh Water Resources and International Security’, International Security, 18:1, pp. 79112.Google Scholar
Gleick, Peter H. (2014) ‘Water, Drought, Climate Change, and Conflict in Syria’, Weather Climate and Society, 6, pp. 331–40.Google Scholar
Goldsworthy, Heather (2010) ‘Women, Global Environmental Change, and Human Security’, in Matthew, Richard et al. eds., Global Environmental Change and Human Security (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press), pp. 215–36.Google Scholar
Goodin, Robert and Dryzek, John (2006) ‘Deliberative Impacts: The Macro-Political Uptake of Mini-Publics’, Politics and Society, 34:2, pp. 219–44.Google Scholar
Green, D. and Raygorodetsky, G. eds. (2010) Indigenous Peoples’ Knowledge of Climate and Weather. Special Issue of Climatic Change, 100:2, pp. 239354.Google Scholar
Greenhill, Kelly (2016) ‘Open Arms behind Barred Doors’, European Law Journal, 22:3, pp. 313–32.Google Scholar
Grove, Jairus Victor (2014) ‘Ecology as Critical Security Method’, Critical Studies on Security, 2:3, pp. 366–9.Google Scholar
Grove, Jairus Victor (2019) Savage Ecology: War and Geopolitics at the End of the World (Durham: Duke University Press).Google Scholar
Grove, Kevin (2013) ‘Security beyond Resilience’, Environment and Planning D, 35:1, pp. 184–94.Google Scholar
Guillaume, Xavier (2018) ‘How to Do Things with Silence: Rethinking the Centrality of Speech to the Securitization Framework’, Security Dialogue, 49:6, pp. 476–92.Google Scholar
Guild, Elspeth (2009) Security and Migration in the Twenty-First Century (Cambridge: Polity).Google Scholar
Guimaraes, Roberto (1991) The Ecopolitics of Development in the Third World (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner).Google Scholar
Habermas, Jürgen (1984) The Theory of Communicative Action Volume 1. Translated by Thomas McCarthy (London: Heinemann).Google Scholar
Habermas, Jürgen (1989) The Theory of Communicative Action Volume 2 (London: Heinemann).Google Scholar
Haftendorn, Helga (1991) ‘The Security Puzzle’, International Studies Quarterly, 35:1, pp. 317.Google Scholar
Hajer, Maarten (1995) The Politics of Environmental Discourse: Ecological Modernization and the Policy Process (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Hamilton, Clive (2013) Earth Masters: The Dawn of the Age of Climate Engineering (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press).Google Scholar
Hamilton, Clive (2015) A New Kind of Human Being: A Reply to Steve Fuller’, ABC Religion and Ethics, 17 September. Available at www.abc.net.au/religion/articles/2015/09/17/4314453.htmGoogle Scholar
Hamilton, Clive and Turton, Hal (2001) ‘With Friends Like Bjorn Lomborg, Environmentalists Don’t Need Enemies’, Pacific Conservation Biology, 7:3, pp. 214–17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hansen, Lene (2000) ‘The Little Mermaid’s Silent Security Dilemma and the Absence of Gender in the Copenhagen School’, Millennium, 29, pp. 285306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hansen, Lene (2006) Security as Practice: Discourse Analysis and the Bosnian War (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Hansen, Lene (2011) ‘Theorizing the Image for Security Studies’, European Journal of International Relations, 17:1, pp. 5174.Google Scholar
Hardt, Judith (2017) Security in the Anthropocene (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Hardt, Judith and Viehoff, Alina (2020) A Climate for Change in the UN Security Council? Member States’ Approaches to the Climate-Security Nexus. Hamburg: Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy. Available at www.climate-diplomacy.org/publications/climate-change-un-security-councilGoogle Scholar
Harrington, Cameron and Shearing, Clifford (2017) Security in the Anthropocene (Bielefeld: Transcript).Google Scholar
Harris, Paul (2008) ‘Climate Change and Global Citizenship’, Law and Policy, 30:4, pp. 481501.Google Scholar
Hartmann, Betsy (2009) ‘Lines in the Shifting Sand: The Strategic Politics of Climate Change, Human Security and National Defence’. Paper presented at Rethinking Security in a Changing Climate Conference, Oslo, June 2009.Google Scholar
Hayes, Jarrod and Knox-Hayes, Janelle (2014) ‘Security in Climate Change Discourse: Analyzing the Divergence between US and EU Approaches to Policy’, Global Environmental Politics, 14:2, pp. 82101.Google Scholar
Hehir, Aidan (2011) ‘The Responsibility to Protect in International Political Discourse, International Journal of Human Rights, 15:8, pp. 1331–48.Google Scholar
Hehir, Aidan (2013) ‘The Permanence of Inconsistency: Libya, the Security Council and the Responsibility to Protect’, International Security, 38:1, pp. 137–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Held, David (1995) Cosmopolitanism: An Agenda for a New World Order (Cambridge: Polity).Google Scholar
Held, David (2010) Cosmopolitanism: Ideals and Realities (Cambridge: Polity).Held, David and Hervey, Angus (2011) ‘Democracy, Climate Change and Global Governance’, in Held, David, Fane-Hervey, Angus and Theros, Manika eds., The Governance of Climate Change (Cambridge: Polity), pp. 89110.Google Scholar
Heyd, Thomas (2020) ‘Covid-19 and Climate Change in the Times of the Anthropocene’, The Anthropocene Review. Online before print: https://doi.org/10.1177/2053019620961799Google Scholar
Heyward, Clare (2008) ‘Can the All-Affected Principle Include Future Generations?’, Environmental Politics, 17:4, pp. 625–43.Google Scholar
Hiller, Avram (2011) ‘Climate Change and Individual Responsibility’, The Monist, 94:3, pp. 349–68.Google Scholar
Hobden, Stephen (2014) ‘Posthumanisim’, in Death, Carl ed., Critical Environmental Politics (London: Routledge), pp. 175–83.Google Scholar
Holland, Jack (2012) Selling the War on Terror (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Holland, Jack (2013) ‘Foreign Policy and Political Possibility’, European Journal of International Relations, 19:1, pp. 4968.Google Scholar
Holling, C. S. (1973) ‘Resilience and Stability of Ecological Systems’, Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 4, pp. 123.Google Scholar
Homer-Dixon, Thomas (1991a), ‘Environmental Security, Mass Violence and the Limits to Ingenuity’, Current History, 95:604, pp. 359–65.Google Scholar
Homer-Dixon, Thomas (1991b) ‘On the Threshold: Environmental Changes as Causes of Acute Conflict’, International Security, 16:2, pp. 76116.Google Scholar
Homer-Dixon, Thomas (1999) Environment, Scarcity, and Violence (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press).Google Scholar
Hook, Sidney (1994) From Hegel to Marx: Studies in the Intellectual Development of Karl Marx (New York: Columbia University Press).Google Scholar
Hoppe, I. and Rödder, S. (2019) ‘Speaking with One Voice for Climate Science – Climate Researchers’ Opinion on the Consensus Policy of the IPCC’, JCOM Journal of Science Communication, 18:3, A04.Google Scholar
Horgan, John and Boyle, Michael (2008) ‘A Case against “Critical Terrorism Studies”’, Critical Studies on Terrorism, 1:1, pp. 5164.Google Scholar
Horgan, John and Braddock, Kurt (2010) ‘Rehabilitating the Terrorists?’, Terrorism and Political Violence, 22:2, pp. 267–91.Google Scholar
Horkheimer, Max (1972) ‘Traditional and Critical Theory’, in O’Connell, M. ed., Critical Theory: Selected Essays (New York: Herder and Herder), pp. 198238.Google Scholar
Horton, Joshua B. et al. (2018) ‘Solar Geoengineering and Democracy’, Global Environmental Politics, 18:3, pp. 524.Google Scholar
Hough, Peter (2014) Environmental Security (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Hughes, Hannah (2011) ‘Bourdieu and the IPCC’s Symbolic Power’, Global Environmental Politics, 15:4, pp. 84104.Google Scholar
Hulme, Mike (2009) Why We Disagree about Climate Change (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Hulme, Mike (2016) ‘1.5 Degrees and Climate Research after the Paris Agreement’, Nature Climate Change, 6, pp. 222–4.Google Scholar
Huysmans, Jef (2006a) ‘Agency and the Politics of Protection’, in Husymans, Jef, Dobson, Andrew and Prokhovnik, Raia eds., The Politics of Protection (London: Routledge), pp. 118.Google Scholar
Huysmans, Jef (2006b) The Politics of Insecurity: Fear, Migration and Asylum in the EU (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Ide, Tobias (2017) ‘Space, Discourse and Environmental Peacebuilding’, Third World Quarterly, 38:3, pp. 544–62.Google Scholar
IPCC (2013) Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
IPCC (2014a) Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
IPCC (2014b) Climate Change 2014: Mitigation of Climate Change. Contribution of Working Group III to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Jackson, Richard, Smyth, Marie Breen and Gunning, Jeroen eds. (2009) Critical Terrorism Studies: A New Research Agenda (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Jackson, Robert H. (1992) ‘Pluralism in International Political Theory’, Review of International Studies, 18:3, pp. 271–81.Google Scholar
Jacob, Cecilia (2018) ‘R2P and the Prevention of Mass Atrocities’, Global Responsibility to Protect, 10:1–2, pp. 7596.Google Scholar
Jasparro, Christopher and Taylor, Jonathan (2008) ‘Climate Change and Regional Vulnerability to Transnational Security Threats’, Geopolitics, 13:2, pp. 232–56.Google Scholar
Kadlec, Alison and Friedman, Will (2007) ‘Deliberative Democracy and the Problem of Power’, Journal of Public Deliberation, 3:1, pp. 126.Google Scholar
Kaempf, Sebastian (2018) Saving Soldiers or Civilians? (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Kaijser, Anna and Kronsell, Annica (2014) ‘Climate Change through the Lens of Intersectionality’, Environmental Politics, 23:3, pp. 417–33.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Robert (1994) ‘The Coming Anarchy’, Atlantic Monthly, 273:2, pp. 4476.Google Scholar
Kareiva, Peter and Fuller, Emma (2016) ‘Beyond Resilience: How to Better Prepare for the Profound Disruption of the Anthropocene’, Global Policy, 7, pp. 107–18.Google Scholar
Katz, David (2011) ‘Hydro-Political Hyperbole: Examining Incentives for Over-Emphasizing the Risks of Water Wars’, Global Environmental Politics, 11:1, pp. 1235.Google Scholar
Keck, Margaret and Sikkink, Kathryn (1998) Activists Beyond Borders: Advocacy Networks in International Politics (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press).Google Scholar
Kelly, P. and Adger, W. (2000) ‘Theory and Practice in Assessing Vulnerability to Climate Change and Facilitating Adaptation’, Climate Change, 47, pp. 325–52.Google Scholar
Klein, Naomi (2015) This Changes Everything: Capitalism v the Climate (New York: Simon and Schuster).Google Scholar
Kim, Hyunseop (2019) ‘An Extension of Rawls’s Theory of Justice for Climate Change’, International Theory, 11, pp. 160–81.Google Scholar
King, Matt and Carruthers, Peter (2012) ‘Moral Responsibility and Consciousness’, Journal of Moral Philosophy, 9:2, pp. 200–28.Google Scholar
Kirk, Jessica (2020) ‘From Threat to Risk? Exceptionalism and the Logics of Health Security’, International Studies Quarterly, 64:2, pp. 266–76.Google Scholar
Klein, Johannes, Juhola, Sirkku and Landauer, Mia (2017) ‘Local Authorities and the Engagement of Private Actors in Climate Change Adaptation’, Environment and Planning C, 35:6, pp. 1055–74.Google Scholar
Kloprogge, Penny and Van Der Slujis, Jeroen (2006) ‘The Inclusion of Stakeholder Knowledge and Perspectives in Integrated Assessment of Climate Change’, Climatic Change, 75:3, pp. 359–89.Google Scholar
Kolk, Ans (1996) Forests in International Environmental Politics: International Organizations, NGOs and the Brazilian Amazon (Utrecht: International Books).Google Scholar
Kolodziej, Edward A. (1992) ‘Renaissance in Security Studies? Caveat Lector!’, International Studies Quarterly, 36:4, pp. 421–38.Google Scholar
Krampe, Florian and Mobjork, Malin (2018) ‘Responding to Climate-Related Security Risks: Reviewing Regional Organizations in Asia and Africa’, Current Climate Change Reports, 4:4, pp. 330–7.Google Scholar
Krause, Keith and Williams, Michael C. (1996) ‘Broadening the Agenda of Security Studies: Politics and Methods’, Mershon International Studies Review, 40:2, pp. 229–54.Google Scholar
Krebs, Ronald and Jackson, Patrick (2007) ‘Twisting Tongues and Twisting Arms: The Power of Political Rhetoric’, European Journal of International Relations, 13:1, pp. 3566.Google Scholar
Krebs, Ronald and Lobasz, Jennifer (2007) ‘Fixing the Meaning of 9/11: Hegemony, Coercion, and the Road to War in Iraq’, Security Studies, 16:3, pp. 409–51.Google Scholar
Kriegler, Elmar et al. (2009) ‘Imprecise Probability Assessment of Tipping Points in the Climate System’, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106:13, pp. 5041–6.Google Scholar
Kumssa, Asfaw and Jones, John (2010) ‘Climate Change and Human Security in Africa’, International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology, 17:6, pp. 453–61.Google Scholar
Lang, Sabine (2013) NGOs, Civil Society and the Public Sphere (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Latour, Bruno (1999) ‘On Recalling Actor Network Theory’, The Sociological Review, 47:1, pp. 1525.Google Scholar
Latour, Bruno (2015) ‘Fifty Shades of Green’, Entitle Blog, 27 June. Available at https://entitleblog.org/2015/06/27/fifty-shades-of-green-bruno-latour-on-the-ecomodernist-manifesto/Google Scholar
Le Quere, C. et al. (2015) ‘Global Carbon Budget 2014’, Earth System Science Data, 7:1, pp. 4785.Google Scholar
Leander, Anna (2011) ‘The Promises, Problems and Potentials of a Bourdieu-Inspired Staging of International Relations’, International Political Sociology, 5, pp. 294313.Google Scholar
Lenette, Caroline and Miskovic, Natasa (2018) ‘“Some Viewers May Find the Following Images Disturbing”: Visual Representations of Refugee Deaths at Border Crossings’, Crime, Media, Culture, 14:1, pp. 111–20.Google Scholar
Lenton, Timoth and Ciscar, Juan-Carols (2013) ‘Integrating Tipping Points into Climate Impact Assessments’, Climatic Change, 117:3, pp. 585–97.Google Scholar
Levy, Marc A. (1995a) ‘Is the Environment a National Security Issue?’, International Security, 20:2, pp. 3562.Google Scholar
Levy, Marc A. (1995b) ‘Time for a Third Wave of Environment and Security Scholarship’, Environmental Change and Security Project Report, pp. 44–6.Google Scholar
Lewis, Bridget (2018) ‘The Rights of Future Generations within the Post-Paris Climate Regime’, Transnational Environmental Law, 7:1, pp. 6987.Google Scholar
Lidskog, Rolf, Elander, Ingemar and Standring, Adam (2020) ‘COVID-19, the Climate, and Transformative Change’, Sustainability, 12, pp. 121.Google Scholar
Lieven, Anatol (2020) Climate Change and the Nation State (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Liftin, Karen T. (1999) ‘Constructing Environmental Security and Ecological Interdependence’, Global Governance, 5, pp. 359–77.Google Scholar
Linklater, Andrew (1998) The Transformation of Political Community (New York: Columbia: South Carolina).Google Scholar
Linklater, Andrew (2001) ‘Citizenship, Humanity and Cosmopolitan Harm Conventions’, International Political Science Review, 22:3, pp. 261–77.Google Scholar
Linklater, Andrew and Suganami, Hidemi (2006) The English School of International Relations: A Contemporary Reassessment (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Lomborg, Bjorn (2001) The Skeptical Environmentalist (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Lonergan, Stephen and Kavanagh, Barb (1991) ’Climate Change, Water Resources and Security in the Middle East’, Global Environmental Change, 1:4, pp. 272–90.Google Scholar
Lövbrand, Eva et al. (2015) ‘Who Speaks for the Future of the Earth? How Critical Social Science Can Extend the Conversation on the Anthropocene’, Global Environmental Change, 32, pp. 211–18.Google Scholar
Lövbrand, Eva, Hjerpe, Mattias and Linner, Bjorn-Ola (2019) ‘Making Climate Governance Global: How UN Climate Summitry Comes to Matter in a Complex Climate Regime’, Environmental Politics, 26:4, pp. 580–99.Google Scholar
Lovelock, James (2000) Gaia: A New Look at Life on Earth, 3rd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press)Google Scholar
Luke, Timothy (2013) ‘The Anthropocene and Freedom: Terrestrial time as political mystification’, Platypus Review, October. http://platypus1917.org/2013/10/01/anthropocene-and-freedom/Google Scholar
Lynas, Mark (2011) The God Species (Washington, DC: National Geographic).Google Scholar
Lyotard, Jean-Francois (1984) The Postmodern Condition (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press).Google Scholar
Maertens, Lucile (2018) ‘Depoliticisation as a Securitizing Move: The Case of the United Nations Environment Programme’, European Journal of International Security, 3:3, pp. 344–63.Google Scholar
Maertens, Lucile (2021) ‘Climatizing the UN Security Council’, International Politics. Online before print: https://doi.org/10.1057/s41311-021-00281-9Google Scholar
Malm, Andreas and Hornborg, Alf (2014) ‘The Geology of Mankind? A Critique of the Anthropocene Narrative’, The Anthropocene Review, 1:1, pp. 62–9.Google Scholar
Mann, Michael E. and Toles, Tom (2016) The Madhouse Effect (New York: Columbia University Press).Google Scholar
Mann, Geoff and Wainwright, Joel (2017) Climate Leviathan (London: Verso).Google Scholar
Marzec, Robert P. (2015) Militarizing the Environment: Climate Change and the Security State (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press).Google Scholar
Maslin, Mark and Austin, Patrick (2012) ‘Climate Models at Their Limit?’, Nature, 486, pp. 183–4.Google Scholar
Mathews, Jessica (1989) ‘Redefining Security’, Foreign Affairs, 68:2, pp. 162–77.Google Scholar
Mattern, Janice (2001) ‘The Power Politics of Identity’, European Journal of International Relations, 7:3, pp. 349–97.Google Scholar
Matthew, Richard A. and Upreti, Bishnu (2010) ‘Environmental Change and Human Security in Nepal’, in Matthew, et al. eds. Global Environmental Change and Human Security (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press), pp. 137–54.Google Scholar
Matthew, Richard A., Barnett, Jon, McDonald, Bryan and O’Brien, Karen L. eds. (2010) Global Environmental Change and Human Security (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press)Google Scholar
Matthews, H. Damon et al. (2018) ‘Focus on Cumulative Emissions, Global Carbon Budgets and Implications for Climate Emissions Targets’, Environmental Research Letters, 13, pp. 1020.Google Scholar
Mazo, Jeffrey (2010) Climate Conflict (London: Routledge).McDonald, Matt (2002) ‘Human Security and the Construction of Security’, Global Society, 16:3, pp. 277–95.Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2003) ‘Environment and Security: Global Eco-politics and Brazilian Deforestation’, Contemporary Security Policy, 24:2, pp. 6994.Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2005) ‘Fair Weather Friend? Ethics and Australia’s Approach to Global Climate Change’, Australian Journal of Politics and History, 51:2, pp. 216–34.Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2008) ‘Securitisation and the Construction of Security’, European Journal of International Relations, 14:4, pp. 563–87.Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2009) ‘Emancipation and Critical Terrorism Studies’, in Jackson, Smyth and Gunning, eds., Critical Terrorism Studies: A New Research Agenda (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2011) ‘Deliberation and Resecuritization: Australia, Asylum-Seekers and the Normative Limits of the Copenhagen School’, Australian Journal of Political Science, 46:2, pp. 281–95.Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2012) Security, the Environment and Emancipation: Contestation over Environmental Change (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2013a) ‘Discourses of Climate Security’, Political Geography, 33, pp. 4351.Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2013b) ‘Climate Security and Economic Security: The Limits to Climate Change Action in Australia?’, International Politics, 52:4, pp. 484501.Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2015) ‘The “Climate Games” Aren’t Just Activist Stunts – They’re Politics beyond the UN’, The Conversation, 10 December. Available at https://theconversation.com/the-climate-games-arent-just-activist-stunts-theyre-politics-beyond-the-un-51872Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2016) ‘Bourdieu, Environmental NGOs and Australian Climate Politics’, Environmental Politics, 25:6, pp. 1058–78.Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2017) ‘What Keeps Global Security Academics Awake at Night?’ The Interpreter, Lowy Institute, 9 March. Available at www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/what-keeps-global-security-academics-awake-nightGoogle Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2018) ‘Climate Change and Security: Towards an Ecological Security Discourse?’, International Theory, 10:2, pp. 153–80.Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt (2021) ‘After the Fires: Climate Change and Security in Australia’, Australian Journal of Political Science, 56:1, pp. 118.Google Scholar
McDonald, Matt and Merefield, Matt (2010) (with Matt Merefield), ‘How Was Howard’s War Possible? Winning the War of Position over Iraq, Australian Journal of International Affairs, 64:2, pp. 186204.Google Scholar
McLaren, Duncan (2016) ‘Mitigation Deterrence and the “Moral Hazard” of Solar Radiation Management’, Earth’s Future 4:12, pp. 596602.Google Scholar
McLaren, Duncan and Corry, Olaf (2021) ‘Clash of Geofutures and the Remaking of Planetary Order’, Global Policy. Early view: doi: 10.1111/1758-5899.12863Google Scholar
McLeman, Robert (2011) Climate Change, Migration and Critical International Security Considerations (Geneva: IOM).Google Scholar
McMaster, Don (2002) ‘Asylum-Seekers and the Insecurity of a Nation’, Australian Journal of International Affairs, 56:2, pp. 279–90.Google Scholar
McShane, Katie (2014) ‘Ecocentrism’, in Death, Carl ed., Critical Environmental Politics (London: Routledge), pp. 8390.Google Scholar
McSweeney, Bill (1999) Security, Identity and Interests (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Mearsheimer, John (1995) ‘The False Promise of International Institutions’, International Security, 19:3, pp. 549.Google Scholar
Merchant, Carolyn (1980) li (San Francisco: Harpo).Google Scholar
Methmann, Chris and Oels, Angela (2015) ‘From Fearing to Empowering Climate Refugees’, Security Dialogue, 46:1, pp. 5168.Google Scholar
Methmann, Chris and Rothe, Delf (2012) ‘Politics for the Day after Tomorrow’, Security Dialogue, 43:3, pp. 323–44.Google Scholar
Mikler, John and Harrison, Neil (2013) ‘Climate Innovation: Australian Corporate Perspectives on the Role of Government’, Australian Journal of Politics and History, 59:3, pp. 414–28.Google Scholar
Miller, Kathleen A. (2000) ‘Pacific Salmon Fisheries’, Climatic Change, 45:1, p. 37061.Google Scholar
Milliken, Jennifer (1999) ‘The Study of Discourse in International Relations: A Critique of Research and Methods’, European Journal of International Relations, 5:2, pp. 225–54.Google Scholar
Ministry of Defence (MoD), France (2015) The Implications of Climate Change for Defence (Paris: Ministry of Defence).Google Scholar
Mische, Patricia M. (1989) ‘Ecological Security and the Need to Reconceptualize Sovereignty’, Alternatives, 14:4, pp. 389427.Google Scholar
Mische, Patricia M. (1994) ‘Peace and Ecological Security’, Peace Review, 6:3, pp. 275–84.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Audra (2014) ‘Only Human? A Worldly Approach to Security’, Security Dialogue, 45:1, pp. 521.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Audra (2017) ‘Posthuman Security’, in Eroukhmanoff, Clara and Harker, Matt eds., Reflections on the Posthuman in International Relations (Bristol: E-International Relations).Google Scholar
Molloy, Sean (2018) ‘Morgenthau and the Ethics of Realism’, in Steele, Brent J. and Heinze, Eric A. eds., Routledge Handbook of Ethics and International Relations (London: Routledge), pp. 182–95.Google Scholar
Moncel, Remi and van Assalt, Harro (2012) ‘All Hands on Deck! Mobilizing Climate Change Action beyond the UNFCCC’, Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law, 21:3, pp. 163–76.Google Scholar
Moon, Ban Ki (2007a) ‘A Climate Culprit in Darfur’, Washington Post, 16 June, p. 15.Google Scholar
Moon, Jeremy (2007b) ‘The Contribution of Corporate Social Responsibility to Sustainable Development’, Sustainable Development, 15:5, pp. 296306.Google Scholar
Moore, Margaret (2010) ‘Defending Community: Nationalism, Patriotism and Culture’, in Bell, Duncan ed., Ethics and World Politics (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 130–45.Google Scholar
Morgan, Jennifer and Waskow, David (2013) ‘A New Look at Climate Equity in the UNFCCC’, Climate Policy, 14:1, pp. 1722.Google Scholar
Morgan, Wes (2018) ‘Climate Change: At the Frontlines’, The Interpreter, 20 September. Available at www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/climate-change-frontlinesGoogle Scholar
Morgenthau, Hans (1952) In Defense of the National Interest (London: Methuen).Google Scholar
Moser, Susanne (2012) ‘Adaptation, Mitigation and Their Disharmonious Discontents’, Climatic Change, 111:2, pp. 165–75.Google Scholar
Moser, Susanne (2014) ‘Communicating adaptation to climate change’, WIREs Climate Change, 5, pp. 337–58.Google Scholar
Muuls, Mirabelle et al. (2016) ‘Evaluating the EU Emissions Trading System: Take It or Leave It? An Assessment of the Data after Ten Years’. Grantham Institute Briefing paper No 21. October. Available at www.imperial.ac.uk/media/imperial-college/grantham-institute/public/publications/briefing-papers/Evaluating-the-EU-emissions-trading-system_Grantham-BP-21_web.pdfGoogle Scholar
Myers, Norman (1989) ‘Environment and Security’, Foreign Policy, 74, pp. 2341.Google Scholar
Myers, Norman (1993) Ultimate Security: The Environmental Basis of Political Stability (New York: WW Norton).Google Scholar
Myers, Norman and Kent, Jennifer (1995) Environmental Exodus: An Emergent Crisis in the Global Arena (Washington, DC: Climate Institute).Google Scholar
Najam, Adil (2005) ‘Developing Countries and Global Environmental Governance: From Contestation to Participation to Engagement’, International Environmental Agreements, 5:3, pp. 303–21.Google Scholar
Nansen Initiative (2015) Fleeing Floods, Earthquakes, Droughts & Rising Sea Levels (Baden: Lars Muller Publishers).Google Scholar
Neocleous, Mark (2008) Critique of Security (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press).Google Scholar
Newell, Peter (2008) ‘Civil Society, Corporate Accountability and the Politics of Climate Change’, Global Environmental Politics, 8:3, pp. 122–53.Google Scholar
Newell, Peter (2020) Global Green Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Newell, Peter and Paterson, Mathew (2010) Climate Capitalism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Newell, Peter et al. (2015) ‘Governance Traps in Climate Change Politics’, WIREs Climate Change, 6, pp. 535–40.Google Scholar
Niemeyer, Simon (2011) ‘The Emancipatory Effect of Deliberation: Empirical Lessons from Mini-publics’, Politics and Society, 39:1, pp. 103–40.Google Scholar
Niemeyer, Simon (2013) ‘Democracy and Climate Change: What Can Deliberative Democracy Contribute?’, Australian Journal of Politics and History, 59:3, pp. 429–48.Google Scholar
Nolt, John, (2011) ‘Nonanthropocentric Climate Ethics’, Wiley Interdisciplinary Review: Climate Change, 2:5, pp. 701–11.Google Scholar
North, Peter (2011) ‘The Politics of Climate Activism in the UK: A Social Movement Analysis’, Environment and Planning A, 43:7, pp. 1581–98.Google Scholar
Nsiah-Gyabaah, Kwasi (2010) ‘Human Security as a Prerequisite for Development’, in Matthew, Richard et al. eds., Global Environmental Change and Human Security (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press), pp. 237–60.Google Scholar
O’Brien, Karen (2006) ‘Are We Missing the Point? Global Environmental Change as an Issue of Human Security’, Global Environmental Change, 16:1, pp. 13.Google Scholar
O’Brien, Karen et al. (2007) ‘Why Different Interpretations of Vulnerability Matter in Climate Change Discourses’, Climate Policy, 7:1, pp. 7388.Google Scholar
O’Callaghan-Gordo, Cristina and Anto, Josepf (2020) ‘COVID-19: The Disease of the Anthropocene’, Environmental Research, 187, pp. 12.Google Scholar
O’Driscoll, Cian (2008) Renegotiation of the Just War Tradition and the Right to War in the Twenty-First Century (London: Palgrave).Google Scholar
O’Driscoll, Cian (2018) ‘The Irony of Just War?Ethics and International Affairs, 32:2, pp. 22736.Google Scholar
Oels, Angela (2012) ‘From “Securitization” of Climate Change to “Climatization” of the Security Field: Comparing Three Theoretical Perspectives’, in Scheffran, Jurgen et al. eds., Climate Change, Human Security and Violent Conflict (Berlin: Springer), pp. 185204.Google Scholar
Oels, Angela (2015) ‘Resisting the Climate Security Discourse’, in O’Lear, Shannon and Dalby, Simon eds., Reframing Climate Change (London: Routledge), pp. 188202.Google Scholar
Okereke, Chukwumerije (2010) ‘Climate Justice and the International Regime’, WIRES Climate Change, 1:3, pp. 462–74.Google Scholar
Okereke, Chukwumerije, Bulkeley, Harriet and Schroeder, Heike (2009) ‘Conceptualizing Climate Governance Beyond the International Regime’, Global Environmental Politics, 9:1, pp. 5878.Google Scholar
O’Neill, Robert V. (2001) ‘Is It Time to Bury the Ecosystem Concept?Ecology, 82:12, pp. 3275–84.Google Scholar
Osborne, Natalie (2015) ‘Intersectionality and Kyriarchy: A Framework for Approaching Power and Social Justice in Planning and Climate Change Adaptation’, Planning Theory, 14:2, pp. 130–51.Google Scholar
Page, Edward A. (2006) Climate Change, Justice and Future Generations (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar).Google Scholar
Page, Edward and Redclift, Michael eds. (2002) Human Security and the Environment (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar).Google Scholar
Palmer, Clare (2011) Does Nature Matter? The Place of the Non-human in the Ethics of Climate Change’, in Arnold, Denis ed., The Ethics of Global Climate Change (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 272–91.Google Scholar
Parenti, Christian (2011) Tropic of Chaos (New York: Nation Books)Google Scholar
Parfit, Derek (1987) Reasons and Persons (Oxford: Clarendon Press).Google Scholar
Parfit, Derek (2011) On What Matters (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Paris, Roland (2001) ‘Human Security: Paradigm Shift or Hot Air?’, International Security, 26:2, pp. 87102.Google Scholar
Park, Susan (2005) ‘How Transnational Environmental Advocacy Networks Socialize International Financial Institutions’, Global Environmental Politics, 5:4, pp. 95119.Google Scholar
Paterson, Matthew (1996) Global Warming and Global Politics (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Paterson, Matthew (2001) ‘Principles of Justice in the Context of Global Climate Change’, in Luterbacher, U. and Sprinz, D. eds., International Relations and Global Climate Change (Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press), pp. 119–26.Google Scholar
Peet, Richard, Robbins, Paul and Watts, Michael eds. (2010) Global Political Ecology (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Petheram, Lisa et al. (2010) ‘“Strange Changes”: Indigenous Perspectives of Climate Change and Adaptation in NE Arnham Land (Australia)’, Global Environmental Change, 20:4, pp. 681–92.Google Scholar
Pickering, Jonathan (2019) ‘Ecological Reflexivity: Characterising an Elusive Virtue for Governance in the Anthropocene’, Environmental Politics, 28:7, pp. 1145–66.Google Scholar
Pirages, Dennis (1997) ‘Demographic Change and Ecological Security’, Environmental Change and Security Project Report, Spring (Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson Center).Google Scholar
Pirages, Dennis (2005) ‘From Resource Scarcity to Ecological Security’, in Pirages, Dennis and Cousins, Ken eds., From Resource Scarcity to Ecological Security (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press), pp. 120.Google Scholar
Plesch, Dan (2018) ‘Nuclear Disarmament Is Crucial for Global Security’, The Conversation, 21 July. Available at https://theconversation.com/nuclear-disarmament-is-crucial-for-global-security-it-shouldnt-have-to-wait-99550Google Scholar
Plumwood, Val (1993) Feminism and the Mastery of Nature (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Plumwood, Val (2002) Environmental Culture: The Ecological Crisis of Reason (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Podesta, John and Ogden, Peter (2007–8) ‘The Security Implications of Climate Change’, The Washington Quarterly, 31:1, pp. 115–38.Google Scholar
Pogge, Thomas (2008) World Poverty and Human Rights, 2nd ed. (Cambridge: Polity).Google Scholar
Pojman, Louis ed. (2005) Environmental Ethics: Readings in Theory and Application, 4th ed. (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth).Google Scholar
Pouliot, Vincent (2010) International Security in Practice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Preston, Christopher J. ed. (2016) Climate Justice and Geoengineering (London: Rowman and Littlefield).Google Scholar
Purvis, Nigel and Busby, Joshua (2004) ‘The Security Implications of Climate Change for the UN System’, Environmental Change and Security Project Report, 10, pp. 6773.Google Scholar
Rajamani, Lavanya (2012) ‘The Changing Fortunes of Differential Treatment in the Evolution of International Environmental Law’, International Affairs, 88:3, pp. 605–23.Google Scholar
Ralph, Jason (2018) ‘Pragmatic Constructivist Ethics and the Responsibility to Protect’, International Organization, 72:1, pp. 173203.Google Scholar
Rawls, John (1999) The Law of Peoples (Cambridge: Harvard University Press).Google Scholar
Rayner, Steve and Malone, Elizabeth (1998) ‘Introduction’, in Rayner, and Malone, eds., Human Choice and Climate Change (Columbus, OH: Battelle Press), pp. xiiixlii.Google Scholar
Rayner, Steve et al. (2013) ‘The Oxford Principles’, Climatic Change, 121:3, pp. 499512.Google Scholar
Renner, Michael (1996) Fighting for Survival: Environmental Decline, Social Conflict and the New Age of Insecurity (New York: WW Norton).Google Scholar
Riley, Tess (2017) ‘Just 100 Companies Responsible for 71% of Global Emissions, Study Says’, The Guardian, 10 July. Available at www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/2017/jul/10/100-fossil-fuel-companies-investors-responsible-71-global-emissions-cdp-study-climate-changeGoogle Scholar
Robbins, Paul (2012) Political Ecology: A Critical Introduction, 2nd ed. (London: John Wiley and Sons).Google Scholar
Roe, Paul (2008) ‘Actor, Audience(s) and Emergency Measures’, Security Dialogue, 39:6, pp. 615–35.Google Scholar
Rogers, Katrina (1997) ‘Ecological Security and Multinational Corporations’, Environmental Change and Security Project Report 3.Google Scholar
Ronnfeldt, Carsten (1997) ‘Three Generations of Environment and Security Research’, Journal of Peace Research, 34:4, pp. 473–82.Google Scholar
Rothe, Delf (2015) Securitizing Global Warming: A Climate of Complexity (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Rothschild, Emma (1995) ‘What Is Security?Daedalus, 124:3, pp. 5399.Google Scholar
Ruth, Matthias (2005) ‘Future Socioeconomic and Political Challenges of Global Climate Change’, in Pirages, Denis and Cousins, Ken eds., From Resource Scarcity to Ecological Security: Exploring New Limits to Growth (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press), pp. 145–64.Google Scholar
Ruttinger, Lukas et al. (2015) A New Climate for Peace (Paris: EU Institute for Security Studies).Google Scholar
Salehyan, Idean (2008) ‘From Climate Change to Conflict? No Consensus Yet’, Journal of Peace Research, 45:3, pp. 315–26.Google Scholar
Sanders, Lynn (1997) ‘Against Deliberation’, Political Theory, 25:3, pp. 347–76.Google Scholar
Sandin, Per et al. (2002) ‘Five Charges against the Precautionary Principle’, Journal of Risk Research, 5:4, pp. 287–99.Google Scholar
Saran, Shyam (2015) ‘Developed Countries Must Do More Than Reduce Their Emissions’, The Guardian, 23 November. Available at www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/nov/23/paris-climate-talks-developed-countries-must-do-more-than-reduce-emissionsGoogle Scholar
Sardo, Michael (2020) ‘Responsibility for Climate Justice’, European Journal of Political Theory, online first. https://doi.org/10.1177/1474885120955148Google Scholar
Sayes, Edwin (2014) ‘Actor-Network Theory and Methodology: Just What Does It Mean to Say That Nonhumans Have Agency’, Social Studies of Science, 44:1, pp. 134–49.Google Scholar
Schäfer, Mike, Scheffran, Jurgen and Penniket, Logan (2016) ‘Securitization of Media Reporting on Climate Change’, Security Dialogue, 47:1, pp. 7696.Google Scholar
Scheffler, Samuel (1988) Consequentialism and Its Critics (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Scherer, Glenn (2012) ‘How the IPCC Underestimated Climate Change’, Scientific American, 6 December. Available at www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-the-ipcc-underestimated-climate-change/Google Scholar
Schick, Kate (2011) ‘Acting Out and Working Through: Trauma and (In)security’, Review of International Studies, 37:4, pp. 1837–55.Google Scholar
Schlosberg, David (2013) ‘Political Challenges of the Climate-Changed Society’, PS Symposium, January, pp. 13–17.Google Scholar
Schmidt, Brian C. and Williams, Michael C. (2008) ‘The Bush Doctrine and the Iraq War: Neoconservatives versus Realists’, Security Studies, 17:2, pp. 191220.Google Scholar
Schmink, Marianne and Wood, Charles (1992) Contested Frontiers in Amazonia (New York: Columbia University Press).Google Scholar
Scholz, Imme (2005) ‘Environmental Policy Cooperation among Organised Civil Society, National Public Actors in the Brazilian Amazon’, The European Journal of Development Research, 117:4, pp. 681705.Google Scholar
Schwartz, Peter and Randall, Doug (2003) An Abrupt Climate Change Scenario and its Implications for United States National Security. Available at www.edf.org/documents/3566_AbruptClimateChange.pdfGoogle Scholar
Scott, Shirley (2015) ‘Implications of Climate Change for the UN Security Council: Mapping the Range of Potential Policy Responses’, International Affairs, 91:5, pp. 1317–33.Google Scholar
Scott, Shirley and Ku, Charlotte (2018) ‘The UN Security Council and Global Action on Climate Change’, in Scott, and Ku, eds., Climate Change and the UN Security Council (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar), pp. 1–24.Google Scholar
Seck, Sara L. (2018) ‘Climate Change, Corporate Social Responsibility, and the Extractive Industries’, Journal of Environmental Law and Practice, 31:1, pp. 271–89.Google Scholar
Selby, Jan and Hoffman, Clemens eds. (2017) Rethinking Climate Change, Conflict and Security (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Selby, Jan et al. (2017) ‘Climate Change and the Syrian Civil War Revisited’, Political Geography, 60 (September), pp. 232–44.Google Scholar
Shapcott, Richard (2008) ‘Anti-cosmopolitanism, Pluralism and the Cosmopolitan Harm Principle’, Review of International Studies, 34:2, pp. 185205.Google Scholar
Sharma, Serena and Welsh, Jennifer eds. (2015) The Responsibility to Prevent (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Shearman, David and Smith, Joseph (2007) The Climate Change Challenge and the Failure of Democracy (Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers).Google Scholar
Shue, Henry (1993) ‘Subsistence Emissions and Luxury Emissions’, Law and Policy, 15:1, pp. 3960.Google Scholar
Shue, Henry (1999) ‘Global Environment and International Inequality’, International Affairs, 75:3, pp. 531–45.Google Scholar
Shue, Henry (2014) Climate Justice: Vulnerability and Protection (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Shue, Henry (2015) ‘Historical Responsibility, Harm Prohibition, and Preservation Requirement’, Moral Philosophy and Politics, 2:1, pp. 731.Google Scholar
Shue, Henry (2017) ‘Responsible for What? Carbon Producer CO2 Contributions and the Energy Transition’, Climatic Change, 144:4, pp. 591–6.Google Scholar
Sikor, Thomas ed. (2013) The Justices and Injustices of Ecosystem Services (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Singer, Peter (1975) Animal Liberation (New York: Harper Collins).Google Scholar
Singer, Peter (2002) One World: The Ethics of Globalization (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press).Skjærseth, Jon Birger and Skodvin, Tora (2009) Climate Change and the Oil Industry (Manchester: Manchester University Press).Google Scholar
Slezak, Michael (2017) ‘Queensland Tree Clearing Wipes Out Federal Emissions Gains’, The Guardian, 6 October. Available at www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/oct/06/queensland-tree-clearing-wipes-out-federal-emissions-gainsGoogle Scholar
Smit, Barry and Wandel, Johanna (2006) ‘Adaptation, Adaptive Capacity and Vulnerability’, Global Environmental Change, 16:3, pp. 282–92.Google Scholar
Smith, Dan and Vivekananda, Janani (2007) A Climate of Conflict: The Links between Climate Change, Peace and War (London: International Alert).Google Scholar
Smith, Steve (1999) ‘The Increasing Insecurity of Security Studies’, Contemporary Security Policy, 20:3, pp. 72101.Google Scholar
Soper, Kate (1995) What Is Nature? Culture, Politics and the Non-Human (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers Ltd).Google Scholar
Starr, Joyce (1991) ‘Water Wars’, Foreign Policy, 82, pp. 1736.Google Scholar
Steffan, Will et al. (2004) Global Change and the Earth System: A Planet under Pressure (Heidelberg: Springer).Google Scholar
Steffan, Will, Crutzen, Paul and McNeill, John (2007) ‘The Anthropocene: Are Humans Now Overwhelming the Great Forces of Nature?’, Ambio, 36:8, pp. 614–21.Google Scholar
Steffan, Will et al. (2018) ‘Trajectories of the Earth System in the Anthropocene’, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Published ahead of print. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1810141115Google Scholar
Stengel, Frank (2019) ‘Securitization a Discursive (Re)Articulation: Explaining the Relative Effectiveness of Threat Construction’, New Political Science, 41:2, pp. 294312.Google Scholar
Stritzel, Holger (2011) ‘Security, the Translation’, Security Dialogue, 42:4–5, pp. 343–55.Google Scholar
Sturrock, Robert and Ferguson, Peter (2015) The Longest Conflict: Australia’s Climate Security Challenge (Sydney: CPD).Google Scholar
Sunstein, Cass R. (2003) ‘Beyond the Precautionary Principle’, University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 151:3, pp. 1003–58.Google Scholar
Sunstein, Cass R. (2005) ‘Introduction’, in Sunstein, and Nussbaum, Martha C. eds., Animal Rights: Current Debates and New Trends (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 1–18.Google Scholar
Sunstein, Cass R. and Nussbaum, Martha C. eds. (2004) Animal Rights: Current Debates and New Trends (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Sutter, John D. (2017) ‘Sixth Mass Extinction: The Era of Biological Annihilation’, CNN, 11 July. Available at https://edition.cnn.com/2017/07/11/world/sutter-mass-extinction-ceballos-study/index.htmlGoogle Scholar
Svarstad, Hanne and Benhaminsen, Tor (2020) ‘Reading Racial Environmental Justice through a Political Ecology Lens’, Geoforum, 108, pp. 111.Google Scholar
Symons, Jonathan (2018) ‘Geoengineering Justice: Who Gets to Decide Whether to Hack the Climate?’, The Breakthrough Institute, 1 March.Google Scholar
Symons, Jonathan (2019a) Ecomodernism: Technology, Politics and the Climate Crisis (Cambridge: Polity).Google Scholar
Symons, Jonathan (2019b) ‘Realist Climate Ethics’, Review of International Studies, 45:1, pp. 141–60.Google Scholar
Symons, Janathan and Karlsson, Rasmus (2015) ‘Green Political Theory in a Climate-Changed World: Between Innovation and Restraint’, Environmental Politics, 24:2, pp. 173–92.Google Scholar
Sze, Julie et al. (2009) ‘Best in Show? Climate and Environmental Justice Policy in California’, Environmental Justice, 2:4, pp. 179–84.Google Scholar
Szerszynski, Bronislaw et al. (2013) ‘Why Solar Radiation Management Geoengineering and Democracy Won’t Mix’, Environment and Planning A, 45:12, pp. 2809–16.Google Scholar
Thomas, Caroline (2000) Global Governance, Development and Human Security (London: Pluto).Google Scholar
Thomas, Chris D. (2017a) Inheritors of the Earth: How Nature Is Thriving in an Age of Extinction (New York: Public Affairs).Google Scholar
Thomas, Michael (2017b) The Securitization of Climate Change (Berlin: Springer).Google Scholar
Thomas, Nicholas and Tow, William T. (2002) ‘Gaining Security by Trashing the State? A Reply to Bellamy and McDonald’, Security Dialogue, 33:3, pp. 379–82.Google Scholar
Thompson, Dennis (2010) ‘Representing Future Generations: Political Presentism and Democratic Trusteeship’, Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 13:1, pp. 1737.Google Scholar
Thrall, Trevor (2007) ‘A Bear in the Woods? Threat Framing and the Marketplace of Values’, Security Studies, 16:3, pp. 452–88.Google Scholar
Tobin, Paul (2017) ‘Leaders and Laggards: Climate Policy Ambition in Developed States’, Global Environmental Politics, 17:4, pp. 2847.Google Scholar
Tomlinson, Luke (2015) Procedural Justice in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (New York: Springer).Google Scholar
Ullman, Richard (1983) ‘Redefining Security’, International Security, 18:1, pp. 129–53.Google Scholar
UNDP (1994) New Dimensions of Human Security (New York: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
UNDP (2007) Fighting Climate Change: Human Solidarity in a Divided World (New York: Palgrave).Google Scholar
UNEP (2007) Sudan: Post-Conflict Environmental Assessment (Nairobi: UNEP).Google Scholar
UN General Assembly (UNGA) (2009a) ‘Climate Change and its Possible Security Implications: Report of the Secretary-General’, A64/350, 11 September. Available at https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/667264Google Scholar
UN General Assembly (UNGA) (2009b) ‘General Assembly, Expressing Deep Concern, Invites Major United Nations Organs to Intensify Efforts in Addressing Security Implications of Climate Change’, A63/GA/10830, 3 June. Available at https://www.un.org/press/en/2009/ga10830.doc.htmGoogle Scholar
UNSC (2007). 5663rd Meeting. S/PV.5663 and S/PV.5663 Resumption 1. 17 April. Available at http://repository.un.org/bitstream/handle/11176/9273/S_PV.5663%28Resumption1%29-EN.pdf?sequence=3&isAllowed=yGoogle Scholar
UNSC (2011a) 6587th Meeting. S/PV.6587 and S/PV.6587 Resumption 1. 20 July. Available at http://repository.un.org/bitstream/handle/11176/15697/S_PV.6587%28Resumption1%29-EN.pdf?sequence=3&isAllowed=yGoogle Scholar
Urban, Mark (2015) ‘Accelerating Extinction Risk from Climate Change’, Science, 384:6234, pp. 571–3.Google Scholar
Uvin, Robert (1996) ‘Tragedy in Rwanda: The Political Ecology of Conflict’, Environment, 18:1, pp. 715; 26.Google Scholar
Vanderheiden, Steven (2015) ‘Justice and Climate Finance’, The International Spectator, 50:1, pp. 3145.Google Scholar
Vogel, Brennan and Henstra, Daniel (2015) ‘Studying Local Climate Adaptation’, Global Environmental Change, 31, pp. 110–20.Google Scholar
Voigt, Christina and Ferreira, Felipe (2016) ‘Differentiation in the Paris Agreement’, Climate Law, 6, pp. 5874.Google Scholar
Von Lucke, Franziskus, Wellman, Zehra and Diez, Thomas (2014) ‘What’s at Stake in Securitizing Climate Change?’, Geopolitics, 19:4, pp. 857–84.Google Scholar
Wæver, Ole (1995) ‘Securitization and Desecuritization’, in Lipschutz, Ronnie D. ed., On Security (New York: Columbia University Press), pp. 4686.Google Scholar
Wæver, Ole (2000) ‘The EU as a Security Actor’, in Kelstrup, M. and Williams, M. C. eds., International Relations Theory and the Politics of European Integration (London: Routledge), pp. 250–94.Google Scholar
Wæver, Ole (2002) Security: A Conceptual History for International Relations. Paper presented at the British International Studies Association Conference, London, 16–18 December.Google Scholar
Wæver, Ole (2011) ‘Politics, Security, Theory’, Security Dialogue, 42:4–5, pp. 465–80.Google Scholar
Wakefield, Stephanie, Grove, Kevin and Chandler, David (2020) ‘Introduction’, in Chandler, D., Grove, K. and Wakefield, S. eds., Resilience in the Anthropocene (London: Routledge), pp. 119.Google Scholar
Walt, Stephen (1991) ‘Renaissance of Security Studies’, International Studies Quarterly, 35:2, pp. 211–39.Google Scholar
Walzer, Michael (1977) Just and Unjust Wars (New York: Basic Books).Google Scholar
Walzer, Michael (1983) Spheres of Justice: A Defense of Pluralism and Equality (New York: Basic Books).Google Scholar
Wapner, Paul (1995) ‘Politics beyond the State: Environmental Activism and World Civic Politics’, World Politics, 47, pp. 311–40.Google Scholar
Warner, Jeroen and Boas, Ingrid (2019) ‘Securitization of Climate Change: How Invoking Global Dangers for Instrumental Ends Can Backfire’, Environment and Planning C, 37:8, pp. 1471–88.Google Scholar
Wiener, Antje (2014) A Theory of Contestation (Berlin: Springer).Google Scholar
Weijers, Dan, Eng, David and Das, Roman (2010) ‘Sharing the Responsibility of Dealing with Climate Change: Interpreting the Principle of Common but Differentiated Responsibilities’, in Boston, Jonathan, Bradstock, Andrew and Eng, David eds., Public Policy: Why Ethics Matters (Canberra: ANU Press), pp. 141–58.Google Scholar
Weldes, Jutta (1996) ‘Constructing the National Interest’, European Journal of International Relations, 2:3, pp. 275318.Google Scholar
Welzer, Harald (2012) Climate Wars (Cambridge: Polity).Google Scholar
Wendt, Alexander (1992) ‘Anarchy Is What States Make of It’, International Organization, 46:2, pp. 391425.Google Scholar
Werrell, C. et al. (2017) ‘A Responsibility to Prepare’, Briefer 38, Center for Climate and Security, 7 August (Washington, DC: CCS).Google Scholar
Werrell, C. and Femia, F. (2016) ‘EU to Focus on Climate Diplomacy, Security, Stability, Migration Links’, Climate & Security, 23 February.Google Scholar
Western, Jon (2005) ‘The War over Iraq: Selling War to the American Public’, Security Studies, 14:1, pp. 106–39.Google Scholar
WGBU (2007) World in Transition – Climate Change as a Security Risk (London: Earthscan). Available at www.wbgu.de/wbgu_jg2007_engl.pdfGoogle Scholar
Wheeler, Nicholas J. (2000) Saving Strangers: Humanitarian Intervention in International Society (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Wheeler, Nicholas J. and Dunne, Tim (1996) ‘Hedley Bull’s Pluralism of the Intellect and Solidarism of the Will’, International Affairs, 72:1, pp. 91107.Google Scholar
White, Gregory (2011) Climate Change and Migration (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Wienhues, Anna (2020) Ecological Justice and the Extinction Crisis (Bristol: Bristol University Press).Google Scholar
Wigley, T. M. L. (2006) ‘A Combined Mitigation/Geoengineering Approach to Climate Stabilization’, Science, 314:5798, pp. 542–4.Google Scholar
Williams, John (2005) ‘Pluralism, Solidarism and the Emergence of World Society in English School Theory’, International Relations, 19:1, pp. 1938.Google Scholar
Williams, Michael (1998) ‘Identity and the Politics of Security’, European Journal of International Relations, 11:3, pp. 307–37.Google Scholar
Williams, Michael (2006) Culture and Security: Symbolic Power and the Politics of International Security (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Williams, Paul (2004) ‘Critical Security Studies’, in Bellamy, Alex J. ed., International Society and Its Critics (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 135–50.Google Scholar
Wissenberg, Marcel and Schlosberg, David eds. (2014) Political Animals and Animal Politics (New York: Palgrave).Google Scholar
Wolff, Aaron T. (1998) ‘Conflict and Cooperation along International Waterways’, Water Policy, 1:2, pp. 251–65.Google Scholar
Wolfers, Arnold (1952) ‘“National Security” as an Ambiguous Symbol’, Political Science Quarterly, 67:4, pp. 481502.Google Scholar
Wong, Poh Poh (2011) ‘Small Island Developing States’, WIRES Climate Change, 2:1, pp. 16.Google Scholar
Woocher, Lawrence (2012) ‘The Responsibility to Prevent: Towards a Strategy’, in Andy Knight, W. and Egerton, Frazer eds., The Routledge Handbook of the Responsibility to Protect (London: Routledge), pp. 2235.Google Scholar
Wyn Jones, Richard (1999) Security, Strategy and Critical Theory (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner).Google Scholar
Youatt, Rafi (2014) ‘Interspecies Relations, International Relations: Rethinking Anthropocentric Politics’, Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 43:1, pp. 207–23.Google Scholar
Youatt, Rafi (2017) ‘Personhood and the Rights of Nature’, International Political Sociology, 11:1, pp. 3954.Google Scholar
Young, Iris Marion (2000) Inclusion and Democracy (New York: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Yusoff, Kathryn (2013) ‘Geologic Life: Prehistory, Climate, Futures in the Anthropocene’, Environment and Planning D, 31, pp. 779–95.Google Scholar
Zebrowski, Chris (2013) ‘The Nature of Resilience’, Resilience, 1:3, pp. 159–73.Google Scholar
Zhou, Jiayi (2017) ‘National Climate-Related Security Policies of the Permanent Members of the UN Security Council’, SIPRI Working Paper, December (Stockholm: SIPRI). Available at www.sipri.org/publications/2017/working-paper/national-climate-related-security-policies-permanent-member-states-united-nations-security-councilGoogle Scholar
Zielinski, Sarah (2015) ‘Climate Change Will Accelerate Earth’s Sixth Mass Extinction’, Smithsonian Magazine, 30 April. Available at www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/climate-change-will-accelerate-earths-sixth-mass-extinction-180955138/Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • References
  • Matt McDonald, University of Queensland
  • Book: Ecological Security
  • Online publication: 10 September 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009024495.008
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • References
  • Matt McDonald, University of Queensland
  • Book: Ecological Security
  • Online publication: 10 September 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009024495.008
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • References
  • Matt McDonald, University of Queensland
  • Book: Ecological Security
  • Online publication: 10 September 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009024495.008
Available formats
×