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BROWN, OLI (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   103050


Climate change: a new threat to stability in west Africa? evidence from Ghana and Burkina Faso / Brown, Oli; Crawford, Alec   Journal Article
Brown, Oli Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
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2
ID:   079895


Climate change as the ‘new’ security threat: implications for Africa / Brown, Oli; Hammill, Anne; Mcleman, Robert   Journal Article
Brown, Oli Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract Once it was an environmental issue, then an energy problem, now climate change is being recast as a security threat. So far, the debate has focused on creating a security 'hook', illustrated by anecdote, to invest climate negotiations with a greater sense of urgency. Political momentum behind the idea of climate change as a security threat has progressed quickly, even reaching the United Nations Security Council. This article reviews the linkages between climate change and security in Africa and analyses the role of climate change adaptation policies in future conflict prevention. Africa, with its history of ethnic, resource and interstate conflict, is seen by many as particularly vulnerable to this new type of security threat, despite being the continent least responsible for global greenhouse gas emissions. Projected climatic changes for Africa suggest a future of increasingly scarce water, collapsing agricultural yields, encroaching desert and damaged coastal infrastructure. Such impacts, should they occur, would undermine the 'carrying capacity' of large parts of Africa, causing destabilizing population movements and raising tensions over dwindling strategic resources. In such cases, climate change could be a factor that tips fragile states into socio-economic and political collapse. Climate change is only one of many security, environmental and developmental challenges facing Africa. Its impacts will be magnified or moderated by underlying conditions of governance, poverty and resource management, as well as the nature of climate change impacts at local and regional levels. Adaptation policies and programmes, if implemented quickly and at multiple scales, could help avert climate change and other environmental stresses becoming triggers for conflict. But, adaptation must take into account existing social, political and economic tensions and avoid exacerbating them
Key Words Environment  Africa  Climate Change  Environment Security 
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3
ID:   171578


Fiddling while Australia burns / Brown, Oli; Froggatt, Antony; Benton, Tim G   Journal Article
Brown, Oli Journal Article
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