Implications of transforming climate change risks into security risks
Implications of transforming climate change risks into security risks
Purpose
A number of severe weather events have influenced a shift in UK policy concerning how climate-induced hazards are managed. Whist this shift has encouraged improvements in emergency management and preparedness, the risk of climate change is increasingly becoming securitised within policy discourses, and enmeshed with broader agendas traditionally associated with human-induced threats. Climate change is seen as a security risk because it can impede development of a nation. The purpose of this paper is to explore the evolution of the securitisation of climate change, and interrogates how such framings influence a range of conceptual and policy focused approaches towards both security and climate change.
Design/methodology/approach
Drawing upon the UK context, the paper uses a novel methodological approach combining critical discourse analysis and focus groups with security experts and policymakers.
Findings
The resulting policy landscape appears inexorably skewed towards short-term decision cycles that do little to mitigate longer-term threats to the nation’s assets. Whilst a prominent political action on a global level is required in order to mitigate the root causes (i.e. GHG emissions), national level efforts focus on adaptation (preparedness to the impacts of climate-induced hazards), and are forming part of the security agenda.
Originality/value
These issues are not restricted to the UK: understanding the role of security and its relationship to climate change becomes more pressing and urgent, as it informs the consequences of securitising climate change risks for development-disaster risk system.
460 - 477
Chmutina, K.
6f466905-1a98-446a-b298-861ac10a0913
Fussey, P.
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Dainty, A.
6eeb1b6a-e63e-4766-b7a4-b140631b98a4
Bosher, L.
c61820e9-a8d9-4bd7-a001-39c933bdb166
16 October 2018
Chmutina, K.
6f466905-1a98-446a-b298-861ac10a0913
Fussey, P.
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Dainty, A.
6eeb1b6a-e63e-4766-b7a4-b140631b98a4
Bosher, L.
c61820e9-a8d9-4bd7-a001-39c933bdb166
Chmutina, K., Fussey, P., Dainty, A. and Bosher, L.
(2018)
Implications of transforming climate change risks into security risks.
Disaster Prevention and Management: An International Journal, 27 (5), .
(doi:10.1108/DPM-04-2018-0121).
Abstract
Purpose
A number of severe weather events have influenced a shift in UK policy concerning how climate-induced hazards are managed. Whist this shift has encouraged improvements in emergency management and preparedness, the risk of climate change is increasingly becoming securitised within policy discourses, and enmeshed with broader agendas traditionally associated with human-induced threats. Climate change is seen as a security risk because it can impede development of a nation. The purpose of this paper is to explore the evolution of the securitisation of climate change, and interrogates how such framings influence a range of conceptual and policy focused approaches towards both security and climate change.
Design/methodology/approach
Drawing upon the UK context, the paper uses a novel methodological approach combining critical discourse analysis and focus groups with security experts and policymakers.
Findings
The resulting policy landscape appears inexorably skewed towards short-term decision cycles that do little to mitigate longer-term threats to the nation’s assets. Whilst a prominent political action on a global level is required in order to mitigate the root causes (i.e. GHG emissions), national level efforts focus on adaptation (preparedness to the impacts of climate-induced hazards), and are forming part of the security agenda.
Originality/value
These issues are not restricted to the UK: understanding the role of security and its relationship to climate change becomes more pressing and urgent, as it informs the consequences of securitising climate change risks for development-disaster risk system.
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More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 August 2018
Published date: 16 October 2018
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 495084
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495084
ISSN: 0965-3562
PURE UUID: 1d5ae6fa-c390-4ee3-8ae1-b65a320d79df
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Date deposited: 28 Oct 2024 18:07
Last modified: 29 Oct 2024 03:13
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Contributors
Author:
K. Chmutina
Author:
P. Fussey
Author:
A. Dainty
Author:
L. Bosher
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