1. Locating Environmental Security 2. Environmental Insecurity: Ecological Exacerbations of Underdevelopment 3. Security: From What and For Whom? 4. New Security Issues: The Old Guard Looks for new Targets 5. Environmental Degradation and Conflict: Conscripting the Voice of Dissent 6. Policies for Pollution and The Pollution of Policy 7. The Biggest of Institutional Challenges: The Military 8. Ecological Security: An Alternative Security Strategy 9. Environmental Security for People 10. The Practice of Environmental Security
A comprehensive critical discussion of environmental security. It reviews the origins and implications of a variety of approaches. Here Barnett argues that environmental security is often driven more by the power of the security-makers than by the need to address environmental problems.
Jon Barnett is a post-doctoral fellow at the MacMillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies, University of Canterbury.
Environmental security is a key issue in the contemporary world,
but for too long it has been just another way of arguing for
traditional types of national security. Jon Barnett - clearly
utterly in control of his material - offers an alternative view in
which peace and justice are not regarded as add-on extras to
environmental security but central to it. Barnett distinguishes
provocatively between environmental and ecological security, and he
writes persuasively about the kinds of institutions required to
bring them about.
*Andrew Dobson, Keele University*
Barnett marches straight into the lion's den of national security
policy, and walks out with a tame security policy firmly linked to
a guarding of the environment in all its ecological complexity --
and complete with human need as a key feature of that complexity...
An adventurous book for adventurous peacemakers.
*Elise Boulding, former secretary general of the International
Peace Research Association.*
Jonathan Barnett's examination and critique of the 'meaning of
environmental security' is one of the most detailed, far-reaching
and perspicacious so far published. It should be required reading
not only for those interested in peace and justice but also anyone
who has or intends to conduct research in the field.
*Ronnie Lipschutz, University of California, Santa Cruz*
By putting the practical lived experiences of peoples, rather than
the military prerogatives of powerful states, at the heart of a
reformulated environmental security, Jon Barnett offers a
constructive alternative that moves the policy debate ahead.
*Simon Dalby, Carleton University*
Environmental security is one of these poisonous concepts which
cloud the mind. Jon Barnett has now dissected the concept,
revealing its baleful impact on our thinking.
*Wolfgang Sachs*
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