UP430511h
Seminar
WiSe 22/23: Climate change and its implications for regional and global security policy
Stefan Lukas
Hinweise für Studierende
Aktuelle Information und Belegung über PULS: https://puls.uni-potsdam.de/qisserver/rds?state=verpublish&status=init&vmfile=no&publishid=97687&moduleCall=webInfo&publishConfFile=webInfo&publishSubDir=veranstaltung Schließen
Kommentar
"The advancing climate change and its consequences for mankind are already foreseeable. While extreme weather events are taking on new dimensions worldwide and droughts and drought are posing ever new challenges to the water supply in some parts of the world, more and more urban areas and living environments are reaching their limits due to rising sea levels. All these developments also have an impact on the security of states. But how exactly does the interplay between climate change and security policy work? What connections have we already been able to see in the past and what developments will security policy structures have to adapt to in the future?
It is these and other questions that the exercise will address. In addition to regular sessions led by Stefan Lukas, Middle East Analyst and Director of Studies in Berlin, visits to the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) will also be offered and other speakers will be invited.
Credit will be given for essays or short briefings, depending on the number of participants. "
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Literaturhinweise
Busby, Joshua W.: States and Nature: The Effects of Climate Change on Security, CUP, Cambridge 2022.
Buzan, Barry; Falkner, Robert: Great Powers, Climate Change, and Global Environmental Responsibilities, Oxford Scholarship, Oxford 2022.
Dröge, Susanne: Addressing the Risks of Climate Change, SWP, Berlin 2020.
Gaub, Florence; Lienard, Clementine: Arab Climate Futures, EUISS, Brussels 2021.
Rabinowitz, Dan: The Power of Deserts: Climate Change, the Middle East, and the Promise of a Post-Oil Era, SUP, Stanford 2020.
Wallace, Donald: Climate Change, Policy and Security: State and Human Impacts, Routledge, London 2019.
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