Climate Migration and Security: Securitisation as a Strategy in Climate Change Politics (Book review)

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Anton, Donald K
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2018
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Abstract

A relatively early strand of action, urged to meet severe transboundary environmental threats, was premised on the need to maintain and promote ‘security’,1 denominated in a number of ways – as international peace and security, national security, human security, ecological security, and so on. Writers who argued that environmental devastation and competition over scarce resources are as significant a destabilizing influence in international relations as direct military threats supported this approach.2 To effectively promote environmental protection, it was argued, is to effectively enhance (or at least not undermine) security.

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International Journal of Refugee Law

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30

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2

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Law and legal studies

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Government & Law

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Anton, DK, Climate Migration and Security: Securitisation as a Strategy in Climate Change Politics, International Journal of Refugee Law, 2018, 30 (2), pp. 403-406

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