Journal article
The impact of environmental cooperation on peacemaking: Definitions, mechanisms, and empirical evidence
International Studies Review, Vol.21(3), pp.327-346
2018
Abstract
The literature on environmental peacemaking claims that groups in conflict can put aside their differences and cooperate in the face of shared environmental challenges, thereby facilitating more peaceful relations between them. This study provides the first comprehensive review of the widely dispersed empirical evidence on such environment-peace links. In order to do so, it distinguishes three understandings of peace and identifies four mechanisms connecting environmental cooperation to peace. The results suggest that environmental cooperation can facilitate the absence of violence within states as well as symbolic rapprochement within and between states, although such links are strongly dependent on the presence of several contextual factors. The most relevant mechanisms connecting environmental cooperation to peace are an increase in understanding and trust and especially the build-up of institutions. By contrast, environmental peacemaking is unlikely to have an impact on substantial integration between states or groups. Based on these findings, the article offers four suggestions for future research: (i) assess the relevance of environmental cooperation vis-à-vis other (presumably less context-dependent) drivers of peacemaking, (ii) pay more attention to the mechanisms connecting environmental cooperation to peacemaking, (iii) focus on the interactions between and the different time horizons of the three understandings of peace, and (iv) study the downside of environmental peacemaking to provide a more nuanced assessment and identify further relevant contextual factors.
Details
- Title
- The impact of environmental cooperation on peacemaking: Definitions, mechanisms, and empirical evidence
- Authors/Creators
- T. Ide (Author/Creator) - The University of Melbourne
- Publication Details
- International Studies Review, Vol.21(3), pp.327-346
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Studies Association
- Identifiers
- 991005546357407891
- Copyright
- © The Author(s) (2018)
- Murdoch Affiliation
- Murdoch University
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
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- Citation topics
- 6 Social Sciences
- 6.27 Political Science
- 6.27.50 International Relations
- Web Of Science research areas
- International Relations
- Political Science
- ESI research areas
- Social Sciences, general