Environmental change and human security in the Caspian region: Threats, vulnerability and response strategies

被引:0
|
作者
Soroos, MS [1 ]
机构
[1] N Carolina State Univ, Dept Polit Sci & Publ Adm, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
This paper examines the ecological changes occurring in the region of the Caspian Sea from the emergent perspective of environmental security. While the implications of environmental change for national and human security have been noted by scholars since the 1960s, the concept of environmental security only became widely fashionable in the late 1980s with the abrupt decline of the cold war and rising concern about global environmental problems. Environmental security has been interpreted in two fundamentally different ways; with the more traditional conception focusing on environmental causes of war and other armed conflict, while the comprehensive one examines how environmental stresses pose direct threats to human security. The principal environmental threats in the Caspian region arise from (1) water pollution, (2) the decline of fisheries, (3) changing sea levels, and (4) land degradation. Prevention and adaptation are two fundamentally different approaches to enhancing environmental security. Four types of adaptive responses are avoidance, protection, recovery, and adjustment. Examples of how Each of these types of response strategies have been employed to address Environmental changes in the Caspian region are cited. A combination of preventive and adaptive strategies will be needed to further enhance the environmental security of the peoples of the region.
引用
收藏
页码:13 / 28
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Urbanization in the Pacific: environmental change, vulnerability and human security
    Cocklin, C
    Keen, M
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION, 2000, 27 (04) : 392 - 403
  • [2] The Caspian Sea region: Environmental change
    Barannik, V
    Borysova, O
    Stolberg, F
    [J]. AMBIO, 2004, 33 (1-2) : 45 - 51
  • [3] Climate change and regional vulnerability to transnational security threats in Southeast Asia
    Jasparro, Christopher
    Taylor, Jonathan
    [J]. GEOPOLITICS, 2008, 13 (02) : 232 - 256
  • [4] National Security Strategies in response to transnational risk and threats
    Martinez, Rafa
    [J]. REFLEXION POLITICA, 2018, 20 (40): : 10 - 20
  • [5] Islands in the midst: Environmental change, vulnerability, and security in the Pacific
    Cocklin, C
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE, ADAPTATION, AND SECURITY, 1999, 65 : 141 - 159
  • [6] Adaptation strategies for reducing vulnerability to future environmental change
    Fazey, Ioan
    Gamarra, Javier G. P.
    Fischer, Joern
    Reed, Mark S.
    Stringer, Lindsay C.
    Christie, Mike
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2010, 8 (08) : 414 - 422
  • [7] Environmental Security and Climate Change: "A Security Assessment of the Balkan Region"
    King, Wendell C.
    Delev, Kosta
    Gerovski, Kuman
    [J]. IMPLICATIONS OF CLIMATE CHANGE AND DISASTERS ON MILITARY ACTIVITIES: BUILDING RESILIENCY AND MITIGATING VULNERABILITY IN THE BALKAN REGION, 2017, : 115 - 118
  • [8] Global Environmental Change and Human Security
    Martins, Rafael D'Almeida
    [J]. DESENVOLVIMENTO E MEIO AMBIENTE, 2010, 22 : 187 - 192
  • [9] Global Environmental Change and Human Security
    O'Brien, Karen
    Barnett, Jon
    [J]. ANNUAL REVIEW OF ENVIRONMENT AND RESOURCES, VOL 38, 2013, 38 : 373 - 391
  • [10] Global Environmental Change and Human Security
    Penna, Anthony
    [J]. PEACE REVIEW-A JOURNAL OF SOCIAL JUSTICE, 2011, 23 (03): : 414 - 417