Research and Policy in Homeland Security and Climate Change: Results from a Roundtable and Thoughts on Developing a National Research Agenda for Climate Change and Security

To scientists, there is a clear consensus that human activities have a measurable effect on the climate, and that subsequently there are concerns about how a changing climate could impact global economies, trade relations, water (and other resource) access and logically therefore, also to security....

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Published in:Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management
Main Authors: Ramsay Jim, Butts Kent
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsem-2014-0049
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:bpj:johsem:v:11:y:2014:i:3:p:337-346:n:7 2024-04-14T08:06:17+00:00 Research and Policy in Homeland Security and Climate Change: Results from a Roundtable and Thoughts on Developing a National Research Agenda for Climate Change and Security Ramsay Jim Butts Kent https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsem-2014-0049 unknown https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsem-2014-0049 article ftrepec https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsem-2014-0049 2024-03-19T10:35:39Z To scientists, there is a clear consensus that human activities have a measurable effect on the climate, and that subsequently there are concerns about how a changing climate could impact global economies, trade relations, water (and other resource) access and logically therefore, also to security. Whether anthropomorphic climate change is a homeland or national security issue is a difficult distinction to make given the lack of consensus over the definition of modern homeland security. However, such distinctions may be moot given the recent and profound changes in the Arctic. On the one hand, Alaska shares a coastline with the Arctic Ocean; hence security concerns in the Arctic may be considered homeland security issues. On the other hand, given the Russian military interest/presence in the Arctic, security concerns in the Arctic may be considered matters of national security. The resulting challenge to the academic community is how to move the discussion about climate change and security forward. The authors recently held a roundtable at Penn State University that included several distinguished and accomplished policy makers, executives and scholars who collectively examined the impacts and threats posed by climate change. climate change, policy, research agenda Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Ocean Climate change Alaska RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Arctic Arctic Ocean Moot ENVELOPE(-64.083,-64.083,-65.200,-65.200) Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management 11 3
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collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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language unknown
description To scientists, there is a clear consensus that human activities have a measurable effect on the climate, and that subsequently there are concerns about how a changing climate could impact global economies, trade relations, water (and other resource) access and logically therefore, also to security. Whether anthropomorphic climate change is a homeland or national security issue is a difficult distinction to make given the lack of consensus over the definition of modern homeland security. However, such distinctions may be moot given the recent and profound changes in the Arctic. On the one hand, Alaska shares a coastline with the Arctic Ocean; hence security concerns in the Arctic may be considered homeland security issues. On the other hand, given the Russian military interest/presence in the Arctic, security concerns in the Arctic may be considered matters of national security. The resulting challenge to the academic community is how to move the discussion about climate change and security forward. The authors recently held a roundtable at Penn State University that included several distinguished and accomplished policy makers, executives and scholars who collectively examined the impacts and threats posed by climate change. climate change, policy, research agenda
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ramsay Jim
Butts Kent
spellingShingle Ramsay Jim
Butts Kent
Research and Policy in Homeland Security and Climate Change: Results from a Roundtable and Thoughts on Developing a National Research Agenda for Climate Change and Security
author_facet Ramsay Jim
Butts Kent
author_sort Ramsay Jim
title Research and Policy in Homeland Security and Climate Change: Results from a Roundtable and Thoughts on Developing a National Research Agenda for Climate Change and Security
title_short Research and Policy in Homeland Security and Climate Change: Results from a Roundtable and Thoughts on Developing a National Research Agenda for Climate Change and Security
title_full Research and Policy in Homeland Security and Climate Change: Results from a Roundtable and Thoughts on Developing a National Research Agenda for Climate Change and Security
title_fullStr Research and Policy in Homeland Security and Climate Change: Results from a Roundtable and Thoughts on Developing a National Research Agenda for Climate Change and Security
title_full_unstemmed Research and Policy in Homeland Security and Climate Change: Results from a Roundtable and Thoughts on Developing a National Research Agenda for Climate Change and Security
title_sort research and policy in homeland security and climate change: results from a roundtable and thoughts on developing a national research agenda for climate change and security
url https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsem-2014-0049
long_lat ENVELOPE(-64.083,-64.083,-65.200,-65.200)
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Moot
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Moot
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Climate change
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Climate change
Alaska
op_relation https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsem-2014-0049
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsem-2014-0049
container_title Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management
container_volume 11
container_issue 3
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