Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies 2017
DOI: 10.1093/acrefore/9780190846626.013.165
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Environment and Security

Abstract: The term environment is often used as a short form for the biophysical environment, which refers to the biotic and abiotic surrounding of an organism or population, and consequently includes the factors that have an influence in their survival, development, and evolution. All life that has survived must have adapted to conditions of its environment. On one hand, part of the study of environmental science is the investigation of the effect of human activity on the environment. On the other hand, scholars also e… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…Rising sea levels will threaten civilian and naval coastal infrastructure and real estate, and melting Arctic ice will open the northern polar region to navigation, resource exploitation, and exacerbate rising international political, economic, and naval/military tensions (Chalecki, ). Along coasts such as the U.S. eastern seaboard and Gulf of Mexico costs will likely reach a minimum $2 billion – $3.5 billion annually in less than 20 years, but as hurricane rates and severity change – particularly a rise in catastrophic category 4 and 5 hurricanes, from the availability of warmer water in tropical regions (Elsner, Kossin, & Jagger, ), total U.S. coastal damage alone could average as much as $35 billion a year or more (Bloomberg, Paulson, & Steyer, ).…”
Section: Some Of the Major Environmental Security Results Of Climate mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Rising sea levels will threaten civilian and naval coastal infrastructure and real estate, and melting Arctic ice will open the northern polar region to navigation, resource exploitation, and exacerbate rising international political, economic, and naval/military tensions (Chalecki, ). Along coasts such as the U.S. eastern seaboard and Gulf of Mexico costs will likely reach a minimum $2 billion – $3.5 billion annually in less than 20 years, but as hurricane rates and severity change – particularly a rise in catastrophic category 4 and 5 hurricanes, from the availability of warmer water in tropical regions (Elsner, Kossin, & Jagger, ), total U.S. coastal damage alone could average as much as $35 billion a year or more (Bloomberg, Paulson, & Steyer, ).…”
Section: Some Of the Major Environmental Security Results Of Climate mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because the region is heating up at twice the rate of global average, the Arctic Ocean is on the road to becoming ice‐free and navigable year‐round, which will generate unprecedented accessibility. Related to this prospect, there are increasing claims being made on undersea energy (especially methane, but also oil), mineral access, fisheries, and shipping rights (Chalecki ; Klare ; Huebert, Exner‐Pirot, Lajeunesse, & Gulledge, ; Zellen, ).…”
Section: The Geopolitical Punch Line: Catastrophe Conflict and Weakmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…SIPRI (1992: 27) pa okoljsko varnost opredeli kot stanje, v katerem so vlade same ali s pomočjo mednarodne skupnosti sposobne obvladovati družbene in politične učinke usihanja naravnih virov. Chalecki (2001: 2) meni, da je okoljska varnost sposobnost države in družbe, da se spoprime z okoljskimi tveganji in škodljivimi posledicami ter nasprotji ali konflikti, ki so povezani s stanjem v okolju. White (2014: 836) pa obrne zorni kot gledanja in opredeli okoljsko nevarnost, in sicer kot »akcije in razmere, ki spodkopavajo sposobnost uporabe narave v meri, ki bi omogočala zadovoljiti človekove potrebe«.…”
Section: Teoretična Izhodišča O Povezanosti Okolja In Varnostiunclassified