Climate change and Australia’s national security

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
T. Ide
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT Climate change can undermine human, national and planetary security in various ways. While scholars harve explored the human security implications of climate change and climate security discourses in Australia, systematic scientific assessments of climate change and national security are scarce. I address this knowledge gap by analysing whether climate change impacts the national security of Australia before 2050, focussing particularly on climate-related threats within Australia and on countries of high strategic importance for Australia. The results indicate that climate change will very likely undermine Australia’s national security by disrupting critical infrastructure, by challenging the capacity of the defence force, by increasing the risk of domestic political instability in Australia’s immediate region, by reducing the capabilities of partner countries in the Asia-Pacific region, and by interrupting important supply chains. These impacts will matter most if several large-scale disasters co-occur or if Australia becomes involved in a major international conflict. By contrast, international wars, large-scale migration, and adverse impacts on key international partners are only minor climate-related risks.
气候变化与澳大利亚国家安全
气候变化会以各种方式破坏人类、国家和地球的安全。虽然学者们已经在澳大利亚探索了气候变化和气候安全话语对人类安全的影响,但对气候变化和国家安全的系统科学评估却很少。我通过分析2050年之前气候变化是否会影响澳大利亚的国家安全来解决这一知识差距,特别关注澳大利亚内部与气候相关的威胁以及对澳大利亚具有高度战略重要性的国家。结果表明,气候变化很可能会破坏澳大利亚的国家安全,破坏关键基础设施,挑战国防力量的能力,增加澳大利亚周边地区国内政治不稳定的风险,降低亚太地区伙伴国家的能力,并中断重要的供应链。如果几次大规模灾害同时发生,或者澳大利亚卷入一场重大国际冲突,这些影响将最为严重。相比之下,国际战争、大规模移民以及对主要国际伙伴的不利影响只是气候相关的次要风险。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
13.30%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: AJIA is the journal of the Australian Institute of International Affairs. The Institute was established in 1933 as an independent and non-political body and its purpose is to stimulate interest in and understanding of international affairs among its members and the general public. The aim of the Australian Journal of International Affairs is to publish high quality scholarly research on international political, social, economic and legal issues, especially (but not exclusively) within the Asia-Pacific region. The journal publishes research articles, refereed review essays and commentary and provocation pieces. ''Articles'' are traditional scholarly articles. ‘Review essays’ use newly published books as the basis to thematically examine current events in International Relations. The journal also publishes commentaries and provocations which are high quality and engaging pieces of commentary, opinion and provocation in a variety of styles. The Australian Journal of International Affairs aims to analyse international issues for an Australian readership and to present Australian perspectives to readers in other countries. While seeking to stimulate interest in and understanding of international affairs, the journal does not seek to promote any particular policies or approaches. All suitable manuscripts submitted are sent to two referees in a full ''double blind'' refereeing process.
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