Socio-environmental balance: How environmental conflicts can support the climate-security nexus

Author:

Hubert Nicolas1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada

Abstract

This article relies on interdisciplinary debates in geography, political ecology and political sciences in order to explore how interpretative analyses of environmental conflict can support the climate and security nexus debate. It analyses mining and environmental conflicts in Burkina Faso and mobilises a framework highlighting the co-constitutive relationship between the environment and human societies. From this perspective, environmental alterations are considered a central and multicausal factor that can lead to a profound change in social and political structures and thus lead to conflicts. This article will first contextualise mining development, environmental conservation and armed conflict in Burkina Faso before reviewing the literature on climate change, environment and conflicts and describing the conceptual and methodological framework. Then, it addresses the case study of four large-scale mining sites in Burkina Faso. Finally, the last subsection explains how this case study can enrich the climate and security debate with an interpretative understanding.

Funder

FRQSC

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference105 articles.

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2. Sensitivity of Twentieth-Century Sahel Rainfall to Sulfate Aerosol and CO2 Forcing

3. African Bank of Development (AfBD), Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), United Nations Development Program (UNDP), & Economic Commission for Africa (CEA). (2013). Perspectives économiques en Afrique 2013. Thème spécial: Transformation structurelle et ressources naturelles.

4. Farmers’ Perceptions of Climate Change and Agricultural Adaptation in Burkina Faso

5. Violence sans fin au Sahel

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