Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:572Hits:20036410Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID107933
Title ProperInternational relations of crisis and the crisis of international relations
Other Title Informationfrom the securitisation of scarcity to the militarisation of society
LanguageENG
AuthorAhmed, Nafeez Mosaddeq
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The twenty-first century heralds the unprecedented acceleration and convergence of multiple, interconnected global crises - climate change, energy depletion, food scarcity, and economic instability. While the structure of global economic activity is driving the unsustainable depletion of hydrocarbon and other natural resources, this is simultaneously escalating greenhouse gas emissions resulting in global warming. Both global warming and energy shocks are impacting detrimentally on global industrial food production, as well as on global financial and economic instability. Conventional policy responses toward the intensification of these crises have been decidedly inadequate because scholars and practitioners largely view them as separate processes. Yet increasing evidence shows they are deeply interwoven manifestations of a global political economy that has breached the limits of the wider environmental and natural resource systems in which it is embedded. In this context, orthodox IR's flawed diagnoses of global crises lead inexorably to their 'securitisation', reifying the militarisation of policy responses, and naturalising the proliferation of violent conflicts. Global ecological, energy and economic crises are thus directly linked to the 'Otherisation' of social groups and problematisation of strategic regions considered pivotal for the global political economy. Yet this relationship between global crises and conflict is not necessary or essential, but a function of a wider epistemological failure to holistically interrogate their structural and systemic causes.
`In' analytical NoteGlobal Change Peace and Security Vol. 23, No. 3; Oct 2011: p.335-355
Journal SourceGlobal Change Peace and Security Vol. 23, No. 3; Oct 2011: p.335-355
Key WordsClimate Change ;  Peak Oil ;  Oood Insecurity ;  Recession ;  Crisis ;  Securitisation ;  Conflict


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text