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The class conflict rises when you turn up the heat: an interdisciplinary examination of the relationship between climate change and Left-Wing terrorist recruitment

The class conflict rises when you turn up the heat: an interdisciplinary examination of the relationship between climate change and Left-Wing terrorist recruitment
The class conflict rises when you turn up the heat: an interdisciplinary examination of the relationship between climate change and Left-Wing terrorist recruitment
The increasing impacts of climate change have created a global humanitarian crisis. Growing populations, unstable political structures, and competition over scarce resources are generating unprecedented levels of insecurity. Capitalising on these complex situations, terrorist organisations are using the environment as a weapon of war, exploiting the strains and grievances exacerbated by climate change to increase support, aid recruitment, and incite violence. Often neglected within contemporary analyses is the potential impact of anthropogenic climate change on left-wing terrorist organisations. Consequently, the research presented in this paper takes an interdisciplinary approach, combining terrorism studies with disaster management to examine a specific type of security crisis that exists in this overlapping relationship between climate change and left-wing conflict. Three regional case studies of terrorist groups and activity are examined in detail—the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the Shining Path in Peru, and Naxalites in India. The article reveals the complex issues that underlie climate disasters, focusing on the impact hazards such as deforestation, rising sea levels, extreme weather, glacial retreat, drought, famine, water scarcity, and migration have on left-wing terrorist recruitment and activity.
Climate change, disaster management, interdisciplinary research, left-wing terrorism, Maoism, Marxist-Leninism, terrorist recruitment
0954-6553
1041-1056
Kingdon, Ashton
c432a21d-9395-47d2-bc34-1ee77f63bc5c
Gray, Briony Jennifer
b2dfca6f-f16b-45ba-bd84-9a6ca17faa1f
Kingdon, Ashton
c432a21d-9395-47d2-bc34-1ee77f63bc5c
Gray, Briony Jennifer
b2dfca6f-f16b-45ba-bd84-9a6ca17faa1f

Kingdon, Ashton and Gray, Briony Jennifer (2022) The class conflict rises when you turn up the heat: an interdisciplinary examination of the relationship between climate change and Left-Wing terrorist recruitment. Terrorism and Political Violence, 34 (5), 1041-1056. (doi:10.1080/09546553.2022.2069935).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The increasing impacts of climate change have created a global humanitarian crisis. Growing populations, unstable political structures, and competition over scarce resources are generating unprecedented levels of insecurity. Capitalising on these complex situations, terrorist organisations are using the environment as a weapon of war, exploiting the strains and grievances exacerbated by climate change to increase support, aid recruitment, and incite violence. Often neglected within contemporary analyses is the potential impact of anthropogenic climate change on left-wing terrorist organisations. Consequently, the research presented in this paper takes an interdisciplinary approach, combining terrorism studies with disaster management to examine a specific type of security crisis that exists in this overlapping relationship between climate change and left-wing conflict. Three regional case studies of terrorist groups and activity are examined in detail—the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the Shining Path in Peru, and Naxalites in India. The article reveals the complex issues that underlie climate disasters, focusing on the impact hazards such as deforestation, rising sea levels, extreme weather, glacial retreat, drought, famine, water scarcity, and migration have on left-wing terrorist recruitment and activity.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 31 May 2022
Published date: 4 July 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: This research was funded by the Digital Economy programme, led by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council on behalf of the UK Research and Innovation.Training Grant: Centre for Doctoral Training in Web Science InnovationGrant Number: EP/LO16117/1 Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
Keywords: Climate change, disaster management, interdisciplinary research, left-wing terrorism, Maoism, Marxist-Leninism, terrorist recruitment

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 468864
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/468864
ISSN: 0954-6553
PURE UUID: cf2b9592-1a1e-4149-ae1e-7f5cdd9f5303
ORCID for Ashton Kingdon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0103-7361

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Date deposited: 30 Aug 2022 16:56
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:07

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Contributors

Author: Ashton Kingdon ORCID iD
Author: Briony Jennifer Gray

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