This article develops a new framework for understanding environment-conflict relations, on both theoretical grounds and through a qualitative historical analysis of the links between water and conflict in the states of Sudan and South Sudan. Theoretically, the article critiques the dominant emphases on ‘scarcity’, ‘state failure’ and ‘under-development’ within discussions of environmental security, and proposes an alternative model of environment-conflict relations centring on resource abundance and globally-embedded processes of state-building and development. Empirically, it examines three claimed (or possible) linkages between water and conflict in the Sudans: over trans-boundary waters of the Nile; ov...
Access to water is a significant twenty-first century concern but the right to it, couched in the co...
textabstractEnvironmental Scarcity, Hydropolitics and the Nile: population concentration, water scar...
Although the notion of environmental security is a relatively new dimension of international relatio...
This article develops a new framework for understanding environment-conflict relations, on both theo...
This article develops a new framework for understanding environment-conflict relations, on both theo...
This article develops a new framework for understanding environment-conflict relations, on both theo...
Is it possible that the wars of the future could be fought over water, the most abundant natural res...
Case studies where both scarcity and conflict are present have dominated research on the nexus betwe...
This article builds on the growing literature that explores the relationships between environmental ...
This thesis argues that state-building in Sudan in the modern era cannot be understood without a mul...
This article looks at the issue of resources-based conflicts in the Horn of Africa region, examining...
In 2022, South Sudan was ranked as the most vulnerable country to climate change in the world as wel...
Does water shortage incentivize cooperation? Case studies suggests that water scarcity can rarely, i...
Over two billion people remain without safe drinking water and more than four billion lack basic acc...
This paper explores the role of environmental human rights in bridging gaps that often exist between...
Access to water is a significant twenty-first century concern but the right to it, couched in the co...
textabstractEnvironmental Scarcity, Hydropolitics and the Nile: population concentration, water scar...
Although the notion of environmental security is a relatively new dimension of international relatio...
This article develops a new framework for understanding environment-conflict relations, on both theo...
This article develops a new framework for understanding environment-conflict relations, on both theo...
This article develops a new framework for understanding environment-conflict relations, on both theo...
Is it possible that the wars of the future could be fought over water, the most abundant natural res...
Case studies where both scarcity and conflict are present have dominated research on the nexus betwe...
This article builds on the growing literature that explores the relationships between environmental ...
This thesis argues that state-building in Sudan in the modern era cannot be understood without a mul...
This article looks at the issue of resources-based conflicts in the Horn of Africa region, examining...
In 2022, South Sudan was ranked as the most vulnerable country to climate change in the world as wel...
Does water shortage incentivize cooperation? Case studies suggests that water scarcity can rarely, i...
Over two billion people remain without safe drinking water and more than four billion lack basic acc...
This paper explores the role of environmental human rights in bridging gaps that often exist between...
Access to water is a significant twenty-first century concern but the right to it, couched in the co...
textabstractEnvironmental Scarcity, Hydropolitics and the Nile: population concentration, water scar...
Although the notion of environmental security is a relatively new dimension of international relatio...