Climate change complicates political violence while producing new forms and scales of it. This has led the climate movement to fail to come to terms with both the violence of climate change and nonviolence as a tactic of resistance. The article begins by counterposing the violence of climate change to the consensus for nonviolence as the only tactic for achieving systemic political change. It then moves beyond that consensus by drawing on Andreas Malm’s Marxist response, Bruno Latour’s claim that climate change puts us in a situation of war, and a critique of the linkages between consumption, carbon, and imperialism. The article concludes that climate change makes the choice between violence and nonviolence a false one, necessitating new hy...
Is global climate change likely to become a significant source of violent conflict, and should it th...
Addressing climate change globally requires significant transformations of production and consumptio...
Addressing climate change globally requires significant transformations of production and consumptio...
Climate change complicates political violence while producing new forms and scales of it. This has l...
There is a high-profile body of work asserting a link between anthropogenic climate change and incr...
This article analyses climate change activism through the framework of agonism. It discusses dominan...
This article considers what is necessary politically to respond to the empirical challenge of climat...
Climate change must be placed in relation to broader contestation of unequal social and environmenta...
Some commentators have recently sought to cast climate change as primarily an issue of national secu...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.This special issue of Geopolitics presents a series of critica...
In South Sudan, people are not engaging in violent altercations because of climate change. People ar...
Why does climate change continue to be a forceful idea which divides people? What does this tell us...
Much has been written about the challenges of tackling climate change in post-political times. Howev...
Climate change poses the greatest threat mankind has ever seen, not since WW2 is the damage potentia...
The author argues the critical importance of studying the links between climate change, environmenta...
Is global climate change likely to become a significant source of violent conflict, and should it th...
Addressing climate change globally requires significant transformations of production and consumptio...
Addressing climate change globally requires significant transformations of production and consumptio...
Climate change complicates political violence while producing new forms and scales of it. This has l...
There is a high-profile body of work asserting a link between anthropogenic climate change and incr...
This article analyses climate change activism through the framework of agonism. It discusses dominan...
This article considers what is necessary politically to respond to the empirical challenge of climat...
Climate change must be placed in relation to broader contestation of unequal social and environmenta...
Some commentators have recently sought to cast climate change as primarily an issue of national secu...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.This special issue of Geopolitics presents a series of critica...
In South Sudan, people are not engaging in violent altercations because of climate change. People ar...
Why does climate change continue to be a forceful idea which divides people? What does this tell us...
Much has been written about the challenges of tackling climate change in post-political times. Howev...
Climate change poses the greatest threat mankind has ever seen, not since WW2 is the damage potentia...
The author argues the critical importance of studying the links between climate change, environmenta...
Is global climate change likely to become a significant source of violent conflict, and should it th...
Addressing climate change globally requires significant transformations of production and consumptio...
Addressing climate change globally requires significant transformations of production and consumptio...