Climate and Society: Human-Environment Interactions and Conflict Geography (2013)
Allgemeines
Course title:
Climate and Society: Human-Environment Interactions and Conflict Geography
Course number:
63-181 and 63-907
Lecturer:
Jürgen Scheffran
Time:
Thursday, 12:15-13:45
Location:
Grindelberg 5, Room 008
Credit Points:
3
Syllabus:
The syllabus of this lecture can be found here.
Contents
Based on a framework of human-environment interactions, the class will assess the complex relationship between climatic systems and social systems, with a focus on the security and conflict dimensions. The first part will introduce the fundamentals of the climate system and other components of the Earth system in the context of the Anthropocene, and discuss the effect of humans on climate change and its impact on humans. Based on an analysis of the geographic distribution of natural resources and environmental change, the conditions and factors of resource conflicts will be critically assessed and discussed, referring to the literature on the tragedy of the commons. Particular attention will be given to the debate on climate change and security, within the framework of linkages between climate stress, natural resources, human security, and societal stability. Based on empirical evidence regarding key indicators and data on climatic and conflict events, models and hypotheses on these relationships will be analysed. Following the assessment by the German Advisory Council on Global Change, major conflict constellations of climate change will be analysed, including water scarcity, food insecurity, flood and storm disasters and environmental migration. These issues will be exemplified in different regional case studies for hot spots of climate change and environmental conflicts. A view will be given to the emerging policy debates on the securitization of climate change and institutional processes to address these issues, including international negotiations on climate change mitigation and adaptation, global governance and low-carbon society. Finally, an integrated perspective will be taken within the framework of human-environment interactions and the role of concepts of conflict resolution, international cooperation and sustainable peace.
Schedule
Date | Subject |
October 24, 2013 | Climate change and human-environment interactions |
October 31, 2013 | Processes and components of the climate system in the Earth system |
November 07, 2013 | Energy, greenhouse gas emissions and anthropogenic global warming |
November 14, 2013 | Ecosystems, natural resources and Tragedy of the Commons |
November 21, 2013 | Water, food and human security |
November 28, 2013 | Natural disasters, sea-level rise and environmental migration |
December 05, 2013 | Climate change, environmental conflicts and societal stability |
December 12, 2013 | Regional cases studies: Europe and Mediterranean region |
December 19, 2013 | Regional case studies: Africa |
January 09, 2014 | Regional case studies: Asia and Pacific region |
January 16, 2014 | Regional case studies: Latin America, North America and Arctic region |
January 23, 2014 | Integrated approaches and cooperative policies in climate-society interaction |
January 30, 2014 | Final Exam |
Selected literature
Barry, Roger G.; Chorley; Richard J. (2003) Atmosphere, weather, and climate, Routledge.
Brauch, Hans Günter et al. (eds) (2011) Coping with Global Environmental Change, Disasters and Security, Berlin: Springer.
Gebhardt, H., Glaser, R., Radtke, U., Reuber, P. (eds.) (2012) Geographie - Physische Geographie und Humangeographie, Berlin: Springer.
Glaser, R., Hauter, C., Faust, D., Glawion, R., Saurer, H., Schulte, A., Sudhaus, D. (2010) Physische Geographie kompakt, Berlin: Springer.
Gleditsch, Nils Petter (2012) Special issue on climate change and conflict, Journal of Peace Research 49.
Goudie, Andrew (2007) Physische Geographie, Springer Spektrum.
Grover, Velma (ed.) (2008) Global Warming and Climate Change, Science Publishers (2 vol.).
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (2007) Climate Change 2007 - Climate Change Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. Working Group II, 4 th Assessment Report, Geneva: Cambridge University Press).
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (2013) Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis, IPCC WGI AR5 5th Assessment Report.
Knox, Paul L., Marston, Sallie A., Gebhardt, Hans , Meusburger, Peter, Wastl-Walter, Doris (Hrsg.) (2008) Humangeographie, Berlin: Springer.
Knieling, Jörg; Filho, Walter Leal (eds.)(2013) Climate Change Governance, Springer.
Moseley, William G., Perramond, Hapke, Holly M. (2014) An Introduction to Human-Environment Geography, Wiley-Blackwell.
Neelin, J. David (2011) Climate Change and Climate Modeling, Cambridge University Press.
Pielke, Roger (2010) The Climate Fix - What Scientists and Politicians Won't Tell You about Global Warming, New York, Basic Books.
Schönwiese, Christian-Dietrich (2013) Klimatologie, 4th edition, UTB.
WBGU (2008) World in Transition – Climate Change as a Security Risk, German Advisory Council on Global Change, Berlin: Springer, http://www.wbgu.de/wbgu_jg2007.html.
Scheffran, J.; Broszka, M.; Brauch, H.G.; Link, P.M.; Schilling, J. (eds.) (2012) Climate Change, Human Security and Violent Conflict: Challenges for Societal Stability, Berlin, Springer Verlag, Hexagon Series Vol. 8.
Scheffran, J., Brzoska, M., Kominek, J., Link, P.M. & Schilling, J. (2012) Climate change and violent conflict, Science 336: 869-871.
Scheffran, J. & Battaglini, A. (2011) Climate and Conflicts - The security risks of global warming, Regional Environmental Change 11 (Suppl. 1): 27-39.
Lecture notes and readings
Lecture notes of previous sessions and the readings for the upcoming lecture are available on a restricted access site.