Anthropogenic activities such as the combustion of fossil fuels, land-use change and intensive agriculture are increasingly influencing the Earth‘s climate and exerting pressure on ecosystems. These changes have amplified the risk of scarcity and shocks (discrete and sudden events) in natural renewable resource (henceforth, NRR) scarcity across the spectrum of spatial scales. The interplay between freshwater scarcity and conflict/collaboration is the most prominent and referenced of the environment-conflict issues in the Third and Fourth Assessment Reports of the IPCC. Discussions with the review user-group, confirmed that a systematic mapping of the literature in this particular field was a priority
This thesis is an inquiry regarding the interconnections between water scarcity, geopolitics, resour...
General scientific consensus is growing that natural resources play an important role in violent con...
How should we characterise the relations between environmental scarcity, conflict, and migration? Mo...
There is a growing global water crisis and that this is one of the of the most significant threats t...
The link between natural resources and conflict has been extensively analysed by the empirical liter...
Scarcity of renewable resources is frequently argued to be a main driver of violent conflict. The 20...
This paper evaluates and assesses hydropolitical conflict and maps the interface currently developin...
Providing both a theoretical background and practical examples of natural resource conflict, this vo...
How should we characterise the relations between environmental scarcity, conflict, and migration? Mo...
As time passes renewable resource scarcities are becoming more common throughout the world. There is...
Since the end of the Cold War, scholars have increasingly tumed their attention to examining the lin...
Case studies where both scarcity and conflict are present have dominated research on the nexus betwe...
Climate change is expected to bring about major change in freshwater availability, the productive ca...
war in the Middle East will be fought over water, not politics”. Time has shown that the popular “Wa...
Recent research has provided new insights into the relationship between climate change and violent c...
This thesis is an inquiry regarding the interconnections between water scarcity, geopolitics, resour...
General scientific consensus is growing that natural resources play an important role in violent con...
How should we characterise the relations between environmental scarcity, conflict, and migration? Mo...
There is a growing global water crisis and that this is one of the of the most significant threats t...
The link between natural resources and conflict has been extensively analysed by the empirical liter...
Scarcity of renewable resources is frequently argued to be a main driver of violent conflict. The 20...
This paper evaluates and assesses hydropolitical conflict and maps the interface currently developin...
Providing both a theoretical background and practical examples of natural resource conflict, this vo...
How should we characterise the relations between environmental scarcity, conflict, and migration? Mo...
As time passes renewable resource scarcities are becoming more common throughout the world. There is...
Since the end of the Cold War, scholars have increasingly tumed their attention to examining the lin...
Case studies where both scarcity and conflict are present have dominated research on the nexus betwe...
Climate change is expected to bring about major change in freshwater availability, the productive ca...
war in the Middle East will be fought over water, not politics”. Time has shown that the popular “Wa...
Recent research has provided new insights into the relationship between climate change and violent c...
This thesis is an inquiry regarding the interconnections between water scarcity, geopolitics, resour...
General scientific consensus is growing that natural resources play an important role in violent con...
How should we characterise the relations between environmental scarcity, conflict, and migration? Mo...