Author:
Black Richard,Busby Joshua,Dabelko Geoffrey D.,de Coning Cedric,Maalim Hafsa,McAllister Claire,Ndiloseh Melvis,Smith Dan,Alvarado Cóbar José Francisco,Barnhoorn Anniek,Bell Noah,Bell-Moran Daniel,Broek Emilie,Eberlein Alexis,Eklöw Karolina,Faller Jakob,Gadnert Andrea,Hegazi Farah,Kim Kyungmee,Krampe Florian,Michel David,Pattison Corey,Ray Caleb,Remling Elise,Salas Alfaro Evelyn,Smith Elizabeth,Staudenmann Jürg A.
Abstract
The environmental crisis is increasing risks to security and peace worldwide, notably in countries that are already fragile. Indicators of insecurity such as the number of conflicts, the number of hungry people and military expenditure are rising; so are indicators of environmental decline, in climate change, biodiversity, pollution and other areas. In combination, the security and environmental crises are creating compound, cascading, emergent, systemic and existential risks. Without profound changes of approach by institutions of authority, risks will inevitably proliferate quickly. Environment of Peace surveys the evolving risk landscape and documents a number of developments that indicate a pathway to solutions––in international law and policy, in peacekeeping operations and among non-governmental organizations. It finds that two principal avenues need to be developed: (a) combining peace-building and environmental restoration, and (b) effectively addressing the underlying environmental issues. It also analyses the potential of existing and emerging pro-environment measures for exacerbating risks to peace and security. The findings demonstrate that only just and peaceful transitions to more sustainable practices can be effective––and show that these transitions also need to be rapid.
Publisher
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
Cited by
15 articles.
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