In addition to environmental change, the structure and trends of global politics and the economy are also changing as more countries join the ranks of the world’s largest economies with their resource-intensive patterns. The nexus approach, conceptualized as attention to resource connections and their governance ramifications, calls attention to the sustainability of contemporary consumer resource use, lifestyles and supply chains. This book sets out an analytical framework for understanding these nexus issues and the related governance challenges and opportunities. It sheds light on the resource nexus in three realms: markets, interstate relations and local human security. These three realms are the organizing principle of three chapters, before the analysis turns to crosscutting case studies including shale gas, migration, lifestyle changes and resource efficiency, nitrogen fertilizer and food systems, water and the Nile Basin, climate change and security and defense spending. The key issues revolve around competition and conflict over finite natural resources. The authors highlight opportunities to improve both the understanding of nexus challenges and their governance. They critically discuss a global governance approach versus polycentric and multilevel approaches and the lack of those dimensions in many theories of international relations.
Author(s): Philip Andrews-Speed, Raimund Bleischwitz, Tim Boersma, Corey Johnson, Geoffrey Kemp, Stacy D. VanDeveer
Series: Earthscan Studies In Natural Resource Management
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge | Taylor & Francis Group
Year: 2015
Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF
Pages: 241
Tags: Natural Resources: Political Aspects; Raw Materials: Political Aspects; Security, International: Economic Aspects; Human Security; Globalization: Economic Aspects; Globalization: Political Aspects
Cover
Title
Copyright
CONTENTS
List of figures
List of tables
PART 1 Struggling in the global resource nexus
1 Introduction: resource struggles and hard choices
2 Understanding the resource nexus
PART 2 The three realms of the nexus
3 Managing markets under stress
4 Strategic interests and interstate conflicts
5 Rethinking human security: the nexus on the ground
PART 3 Cases and controversies
6 Shale gas in the United States: games unchanged?
7 Climate change and security: follow the money and the plans
8 Gated globalism: migration and borders
9 Resource scarcity, political outbidding and potential for conflict in the Nile River Basin
10 Nitrogen fertilizer and food in the nexus
11 Lifestyle changes and resource efficiency: opportunities to bend the curves?
PART 4 Conclusions
12 Facing up to the nexus challenge: avoiding waste, want and war
References
Index