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IP37220 Global Environmental Politics:

Sustainability, Security, and Social Movements


Semester One, 2010-2011

Module Handbook

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University, SY23 3FE
Ffôn/Tel: +44 (0) 1970 622702
Ffacs/Fax: +44 (0) 1970 622709
E-bost: gwleidyddiaeth@aber.ac.uk E-mail: interpol@aber.ac.uk
Gwefan/Website: www.aber.ac.uk/interpol/
IP37220 Global Environmental Politics: Sustainability, Security, and Social Movements

Module convenor: Dr Carl Death


Email: crd@aber.ac.uk

This module divides the subject of Global Environmental Politics into three sections. The first
section (5 lectures) focuses on the history and impact of sustainable development. It is now over
two decades since the Brundtland Commission famously defined sustainable development as
„development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs‟ (Brundtland, 1987: 43) Since then the concept has been
promoted and institutionalized through world summits (Rio and Johannesburg), national strategies,
multilateral regimes, impact assessments, social responsibility charters, sustainable citizen
initiatives, and public-private partnerships. Issues as diverse as climate change, conservation,
poverty and HIV/Aids are routinely framed in terms of sustainable development. This module begins
by considering the evolution and effects of the discourse of sustainable development as one of the
most influential concepts of the late twentieth century.

The second section of the course (four lectures) focuses on the concept of environmental security.
By positing a link between resource degradation and conflict, researchers in the field of
environmental security have highlighted the risks of water wars, oil conflicts, the increased spread
of diseases, poverty and disasters, and predicted a „coming anarchy‟ in which isolated pockets (or
„lifeboats‟) defend themselves and their resources against an increasingly desperate hinterland.
This section critically interrogates the relationship between environmental degradation, resource
scarcity, violent conflict, and (in)security, and links these debates to the earlier material on
sustainable development through the cross-cutting issue of global climate change.

Whilst the first two sections of the course have often focused on international or state-centric
politics, the third part of the course (five lectures) turns explicitly to the role of local or transnational
social movements within global environmental politics. By exploring the struggles and campaigns of
groups such as the Ogoni of the Niger Delta, the Peace Park conservation movement, the
environmental justice movement in the US and South Africa, and climate camps and Transition
Towns in the UK, the ways in which environmental or ecological discourses are being articulated by
specific movements in specific places will be examined. Such a focus will help draw out the
ramifications of the famous green slogan „Think Global, Act Local‟, and will explicitly raise the
central question of to what degree environmental concerns can be accommodated or resolved by
liberal democracies within a state-centric international system.

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Objectives
On completion of this module, students should be able to:

 Explain the ways in which environmental issues have been incorporated into global
governance.
 Account for the evolution of the sustainable development discourse over the past four
decades.
 Critically assess the political impacts of various mechanisms and institutions for governing
sustainability.
 Analyze the conflicts and forms of cooperation produced by issues of environmental
insecurity.
 Assess the contributions of specific ecological social movements to broader issues of
environmental politics.
 Discuss the degree to which environmental issues can be accommodated by liberal
democracies within a state-centric international system.
 Link specific environmental issues to broader theoretical debates within IR and political
theory.
 Reflect on the conceptual coherence of „environmental politics‟ as a distinct field, and
assess the consequences of such disciplinary partitioning.

Teaching Methods
The module consists of 16 lectures and 4 seminars. With fewer and longer seminars, the onus is on
students to prepare diligently and thoroughly. The seminars will involve a range of primarily student-
led activities and exercises, and will include oral presentations which will count for 10% of the
overall mark. Lectures will be used to help students synthesize the literature, and to provide a
broader context for the material they have read. Lectures will also involve short individual, pair, or
group exercises, so students should come to lectures prepared to actively engage with the subject,
and having already acquired some familiarity with the literature on the set topic.

The module will also include an online teaching component, in which students will be encouraged to
contribute entries to a group blog. Specific tasks and exercises will be set through the blog, and
preparation of the oral presentations will need to be uploaded onto the blog. The blog is aimed to
encourage students to reflect on their own progress and reading as the course develops, and to
provide additional opportunities for student-student and teacher-student interaction.

Reading
There is no textbook that covers the entire module, but the books listed below offer a useful and
informative introduction to the topics discussed. A STUDYPACK containing a number of the
essential readings is available for purchase at the start of term. As far as possible, the journal
articles on the reading list are available on the internet.

NOTE: Between the textbooks, the studypack and internet access to journal articles, there is NO
excuse for being unprepared for seminar or lecture discussions! Students should also actively seek
relevant material beyond the reading list, and the volume of literature produced on these issues in
recent years means you will never be short of something to read.
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Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
General textbooks / overview texts:

Adams, W.M. (2009) Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World, London:
Routledge.
Baker, S. (2006) Sustainable Development, Abingdon: Routledge.
Carter, N. (2001) The Politics of the Environment: Ideas, Activism, Policy, Cambridge: CUP.
Chasek, P.S., Downie, D.L., and Brown, J.W. (2010) Global Environmental Politics, Boulder, CO: Westview
Dryzek, J.S. (2005) The Politics of the Earth: Environmental Discourses, Oxford: OUP.

Core texts covering several key topics:

Adger, W.N. and Jordan, A. (eds) (2009) Governing Sustainability, Cambridge: CUP.
Agyeman, J., Bullard, R.D., and Evans, B. (eds) (2003) Just Sustainabilities: Development in an Unequal
World, London: Earthscan.
Ayre, G. and Callway, R. (eds) (2005) Governance for Sustainable Development: A Foundation for the Future,
London: Earthscan.
Barnett, J. (2001) The meaning of environmental security: Ecological politics and policy in the new security
era, London: Zed Books.
Betsill, M.M., Hochstetler, K., and Stevis, D. (eds) (2006) Palgrave Advances in International Environmental
Politics, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Clapp, J. and Dauvergne, P. (2005) Paths to a Green World: The Political Economy of the Global
Environment, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Conca, K. and Dabelko. G. (eds) (2004) Green Planet Blues: Four Decades of Global Environmental Politics,
Boulder, CO: Westview Press
Dalby, S. (2009) Security and Environmental Change, Cambridge: Polity Press.
Dobson, A. (2007) Green Political Thought, Abingdon: Routledge.
Dryzek, J.S. and Schlosberg, D. (eds) (2005) Debating the Earth: The Environmental Politics Reader, Oxford:
OUP.
Kirkby, J., O‟Keefe, P., and Timberlake, L. (eds) (1995) The Earthscan Reader in Sustainable Development,
London: Earthscan.
Paterson, M. (2000) Understanding Global Environmental Politics: Domination, Accumulation, Resistance,
London: Macmillan.
Peet, R. and Watts, M. (eds) (2004) Liberation Ecologies: Environment, Development and Social Movements,
London: Routledge.
Princen, T., Maniates, M., and Conca, K. (eds) (2002) Confronting Consumption, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Taylor, B.R. (ed.) (1995) Ecological Resistance Movements: The Global Emergence of Radical and Popular
Environmentalism, Albany, NY: SUNY.
Vogler, J. and Imber, M. (eds) (1996) The Environment and International Relations, London: Routledge.

There are many more in the library – check them out and let me know if you find any that are
particularly useful.

The studypack
The studypack contains twelve key readings from books in short supply or not available in the Hugh
Owen. It is not intended to replace the core readings, or the core textbooks, chapters and articles. It
is a supplementary source for those who wish to take advantage of it. It contains the following
pieces:
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Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
1. Adger, W.N and Jordan, A. (2009) „Sustainability: Exploring the processes and outcomes of
governance‟, in W.N. Adger and A. Jordan (eds) Governing Sustainability, Cambridge: CUP.
2. Imber, M. (1996) „The environment and the United Nations‟, in J. Vogler and M. Imber (eds) The
Environment and International Relations, London: Routledge.
3. Eckersley, R. (2004) The Green State: Rethinking Democracy and Sovereignty, Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, introduction.
4. Dryzek, J.S. (2005) The Politics of the Earth: Environmental Discourses, Oxford: OUP, chapter 5.
5. Bulkeley, H. and Newell, P. (2010) Governing Climate Change, London: Routledge, chapter 5.
6. Barnett, J. (2001) The meaning of environmental security: Ecological politics and policy in the new
security era, London: Zed Books, chapter 1.
7. Dalby, S. (2009) Security and Environmental Change, Cambridge: Polity, chapter 1.
8. Peluso, N.L. and Watts, M. (2001) „Violent Environments‟, in N.L. Peluso and M. Watts (eds) Violent
Environments, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, chapter 1.
9. Ali, S.H. (2007) „Introduction‟, in S.H. Ali (ed.) Peace Parks: Conservation and Conflict Resolution,
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
10. Harvey, D. (1999) „The environment of justice‟, in F. Fischer and M.A. Hajer (eds) Living With Nature:
Environmental Politics as Cultural Discourse, Oxford: OUP.
11. Naess, A. (2005) „The shallow and the deep, long-range ecology movement: A summary‟, in J.S.
Dryzek and D. Schlosberg (eds) Debating the Earth: The Environmental Politics Reader, Oxford:
OUP, chapter 23.
12. Adams, W.M. (2009) Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World,
London: Routledge, chapter 13.

Background material:
Environmentalists and environmental movements have often been inspired by more imaginative
and creative material – as well as by the natural sciences. Engaging with some of this material may
help stimulate your thinking about the course topics. Included below are some of the classic texts of
the environmental movement, as well as some suggestions of more recent novels or films that may
complement the more academic material. Some of them are also good fun to read/watch!

Abbey, Edward (1975) The Monkey Wrench Gang, Philadelphia: Lippincott. Novel involving environmentalist
sabotage.
Attwood, Margaret (2004) Oryx and Crake, London; Anchor. Dystopian post-environmental collapse.
Burroughs, John (1883) Winter Sunshine, Edinburgh: Douglas. Classic US environmentalist.
Carson, Rachel (1964) Silent Spring, London: Hamish Hamilton. Famous US environmental warning of the
dangers of pollution.
Delillo, Don (1998) Underworld, New York: Scriber. US novel dealing with themes of waste and consumption.
Gorillas in the Mist [film] (Warner Bros, 1988). Dianne Fossey in the Rwandan jungle.
Grizzly Man [film] (Lions Gate, 2005). Werner Herzog documentary following Timothy Treadwell.
Lessing, Doris (1969) The Four-Gated City, London: MacGibbon & Kee. Dystopian novel set in UK.
McEwan, Ian (2010) Solar, London: Random House. A physicist travels to the Arctic circle.
Muir, John (1911) My first summer in the Sierra, Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Classic US conservationist.
Mulladi, Amulya (2003) A Breath of Fresh Air, London: Ballantine. The Bhopal disaster in India.
Roe, Nicholas (1992) The Politics of Nature: Wordsworth and some contemporaries, New York: St Martin‟s
Press. See also collections of Wordsworth‟s poetry, inspired by the English countryside.

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Schumacher, E.F. (1973) Small is Beautiful: A Study of Economics as if People Mattered, London: Vintage.
Influential ecological economics text.
The Age of Stupid [film] (Dog Woof, 2009). British drama-documentary-animation set in post-apocalyptic
world.
The Day after Tomorrow [film] (Fox, 2004). Hollywood climate catastrophe blockbuster.
Thoreau, Henry David (1854) Walden; or ‘Life in the Woods’, Boston: Tickner and Fields. Transcendentalist
voyage of self-discovery, inspired many US environmentalists.
Whitman, Walt (1886) Leaves of Grass, London: Walter Scott. Poems of Walt Whitman.

For more movie titles see the following article;


http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1594/is_5_16/ai_n15674922/

Please let me know of any others you discover that you want to recommend for the rest of the class.

The web:
The internet contains many useful sources of information on environmental politics, science, and
news. In order to relieve the pressure on library resources and practice your research skills, you
should make the most of the web, which is also much more up-to date than many books and journal
articles. The following websites are good starting points. You will undoubtedly find many more
during your research. Use internet resources critically – ask who is writing them and why – and cite
any sources fully in your essays and presentation.

News:

Environmental Leader, business news http://www.environmentalleader.com/


Environmental News Network http://www.enn.com/
Environment news service http://www.ens-newswire.com/
Enviropaedia, environmental knowledge and network-building http://www.enviropaedia.com/default.php
New Scientist, environment section http://www.newscientist.com/section/environment
Treehugger, green blog http://www.treehugger.com/

Organisations and research institutions:

Climate scientists commentary on climate science http://www.realclimate.org/


Earthscan, environmental publisher http://www.earthscan.co.uk/
Eco-equity, social justice NGO http://www.ecoequity.org/
Earth System Governance Project http://www.earthsystemgovernance.org/
European Commission Environment DG http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/environment/index_en.htm
European Environment Agency http://www.eea.europa.eu/
Friends of the Earth UK http://www.foe.co.uk/
Greenpeace UK http://www.greenpeace.org.uk
International Institute for Environment and Development http://www.iied.org/
International Institute for Sustainable Development http://www.iisd.org/
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change http://www.ipcc.ch/
Sustainability, environmental think-tank http://www.sustainability.com/
The Corner House, environmental justice NGO http://www.thecornerhouse.org.uk/index.shtml
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Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
UK Environment Agency http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/
UNDP http://www.undp.org/
UN Earthwatch initiative http://earthwatch.unep.net/
UN Environmental Programme http://www.unep.org/
World Resources Institute http://www.wri.org/
WorldWatch Institute http://www.worldwatch.org/
WWF UK http://www.wwf.org.uk/

The National Library:


The National Library houses a number of resources not found in the Hugh Owen. All students can
obtain a reader‟s ticket, so please make use of this excellent library and wonderful reading room.

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
ASSESSMENT AND ESSAY QUESTIONS
The module is assessed on the basis of a one short oral presentation, and two essays. The oral
presentation (and online preparation) accounts for 10 percent of the total mark, and each essay
(3,000 words) for 45 percent.

The deadline for the first essay is Monday 22nd November. The deadline for the second essay is
Thursday 13th January. For both pieces of work e-mail your electronic copy by 2.30pm, and the
hard copy is to be submitted by 4.30pm. Please see further guidelines on blackboard on „How to
hand in your essay‟

The presentation
Seminars will consist of a variety of activities, including student-led presentations. At the start of the
semester I will circulate a list of presentation topics. These will run across the seminars. You will
present your topic in groups, however you will be graded individually. The oral presentations will be
no more than 6-7 minutes each, and should include three powerpoint slides, and an A4 (12pt)
handout for the class (no more). You will also be expected to upload this material onto the group
blog before your presentation, and to engage with the lecturer and colleagues on the online blog.
Instructions will be discussed in the first seminar and lecture. Your grade will be based on the
quality and clarity of your oral presentation, the visual impact of your slides, the content of the
handout for the class, and your engagement on the online blog. As with any other piece of
assessed work, originality, a strong and convincing argument or perspective, and good use of
resources, will be rewarded. Confused, poorly structured, unclear, or incorrect material will lose
marks. Work that is too long – either with respect to the length of the oral presentation (6-7 minutes;
max three slides), or more than an A4 (12pt) side for the handout, will be penalised. As the
presentation is only worth 10% of the mark, however, please don‟t worry too much about it, try to
enjoy it, and use it to talk to the class, and your online group, about something you have found
interesting in your research.

The following grading scale will be applied for the presentation (10%):

90-100: An excellent presentation, outstanding supporting material, and sustained engagement with
the online blog. Lively, well-informed, and interesting presentation; and useful online comments and
constructive feedback on colleagues‟ posts. Efficient and well-organized, presentation and
supporting materials of an appropriate length, which were posted online in advance of the
presentation.
70-89: An excellent presentation and some online engagement; or alternatively excellent online
engagement and an ok presentation. Some inconsistency across the two media, but overall
satisfactory, with excellence in one of the formats.
50-69: Mediocre across both the presentation and the blog; or an adequate to good performance in
one media, but very low or non-existent participation in the other.
20-49: Mediocre to weak performance in either the presentation or the blog; virtually no or no
participation in the other.
0-19: Low or non-existent levels of participation in both media.

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
The first essay (deadline: 22nd November)
Choose one of the titles listed below. Use examples and the theoretical literature to support your
argument.
 What does „sustainable development‟ mean?
 How are environmental issues managed globally? Answer with reference to specific
institutions, agencies, regimes or policies.
 What makes a good environmental citizen? Answer critically, with reference to a specific
project or policy designed to promote environmental citizenship.
 “One of the most striking political transformations of the past two decades has been the way
in which environmental concern has moved from the margins to the mainstream of political
life” (Dobson, 2007: 2). Discuss this statement.

The second essay (deadline: 13th January)


Choose one of the titles listed below, or present your own title (in writing) by Monday 13th December
for approval. Use examples and the theoretical literature to support your argument.
 Assess the strengths and weaknesses of measures taken to address climate change.
 How has the concept of environmental security been implemented in practice?
 Assess the success or failure of an environmental social movement of your choice.
 What are the main problems for EITHER a) liberal democracy OR b) global governance in
tackling contemporary environmental problems?

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Overview of course topics

Lecture Programme

Lecture 1: Introduction

Section 1: Sustainability
Lecture 2: The Brundtland Report and Sustainable Development
Lecture 3: World Summits in Stockholm, Rio and Johannesburg
Lecture 4: Green states: International cooperation and domestic reforms
Lecture 5: Civic participation and sustainable citizenship programmes
Lecture 6: Capitalism and Sustainability: Carbon Trading Schemes

Section 2: Security
Lecture 7: Climate change and global insecurity
Lecture 8: Environmental security and the Toronto School
Lecture 9: Water wars and food security
Lecture 10: Violent environments: Resource wars or resource curses?

Section 3: Social Movements


Lecture 11: Conflict: The Ogoni and the Niger Delta
Lecture 12: Conservation: The Peace Park Movement
Lecture 13: Pollution: Environmental Justice Movements in the USA and South Africa
Lecture 14: Sustainability: Climate camps in the UK
Lecture 15: Environmentalism and environmentalists

Lecture 16: Conclusion

Seminar Programme

Seminar 1: Sustainability
Seminar 2: Climate change
Seminar 3: Environmental security
Seminar 4: Environmental social movements

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Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture Programme and List of Readings

Lecture 1: Introduction

Useful introductory texts


Conca, K. and Dabelko. G. (eds) (2004) Green Planet Blues: Four Decades of Global Environmental Politics,
Boulder, CO: Westview Press, introduction.
Dalby, S. (2009) „What happens if we don‟t think in human terms?‟ in J. Edkins and M. Zehfuss (eds) Global
Politics: A New Introduction, London: Routledge.
Smith, S. (1993) „Environment on the periphery of international relations: An explanation‟, Environmental
Politics, 2(4), 28-45. Also in C. Thomas (ed.) (1994) Rio: Unravelling the Consequences, London:
Frank Cass.
Vogler, J. (2008) „Environmental issues‟, in J. Baylis, S. Smith and P. Owens (eds) The Globalization of World
Politics: An Introduction to International Relations, Oxford: OUP, chapter 20.

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Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 2: The Brundtland Report and Sustainable Development

Essential
Brundtland, G.H. (1987) Our Common Future: World Commission on Environment and Development, Oxford:
OUP, chapter 2: Towards sustainable development. Also in Conca, K. and Dabelko. G. (eds) (2004)
Green Planet Blues: Four Decades of Global Environmental Politics, Boulder, CO: Westview Press,
chapter 22. Available online at http://www.un-documents.net/ocf-02.htm

Recommended
Adams, W.M. (2009) Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World, London:
Routledge, chapter 3.
Adger, W.N and Jordan, A. (2009) „Sustainability: Exploring the processes and outcomes of governance‟, in
W.N. Adger and A. Jordan (eds) Governing Sustainability, Cambridge: CUP. [Studypack]
Baker, S. (2006) Sustainable Development, Abingdon: Routledge, chapter 2.
Beckerman, W. (1994) „“Sustainable development”: Is it a useful concept?‟ Environmental Values, 3(3): 191-
209.
Dobson, A. (1996) „Environmental Sustainabilities: An Analysis and a Typology‟, Environmental Politics, 5(3):
401 – 428.
Doyle, T. (1998) „Sustainable development and Agenda 21: The secular bible of global free markets and
pluralist democracy‟, Third World Quarterly, 19(4): 771-786.
Dresner, S. (2002) The Principles of Sustainability, London: Earthscan.
Dryzek, J.S. (2005) The Politics of the Earth: Environmental Discourses, Oxford: OUP, chapter 7.
George, C. (2007) „Sustainable development and global governance‟, Journal of Environment and
Development, 16(1): 102-125.
Jacobs, M. (1999) „Sustainable development as a contested concept‟, in A. Dobson (ed.) Fairness and
Futurity: Essays on Environmental Sustainability and Social Justice, Oxford: OUP.
Lee, K. (2000) „Global sustainable development: Its intellectual and historical roots‟, in K. Lee, A. Holland and
st
D. McNeill (eds) Global Sustainable Development in the 21 Century, Edinburgh: Edinburgh
University Press.
Lohmann, L. (2004) „Whose Common Future?‟ in Conca, K. and Dabelko. G. (eds) Green Planet Blues: Four
Decades of Global Environmental Politics, Boulder, CO: Westview Press, chapter 23.
MacNeill, D. (2000) „The concept of sustainable development‟, in K. Lee, A. Holland and D. MacNeill (eds)
st
Global Sustainable Development in the 21 Century, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Meadows, D.H., Meadows, D.L., Randers, J. and Behrens III, W.W. (1974) The Limits to Growth: A Report for
the Club of Rome’s Project on the Predicament of Mankind, New York: New American Library. See
also chapter 1 in J. S. Dryzek and D. Schlosberg (eds) (2005) Debating the Earth: The Environmental
Politics Reader, Oxford: OUP.
Meadowcroft, J. (2000) „Sustainable development: A new(ish) idea for a new century?‟ Political Studies,
48(2): 370-387.
Middleton, N. and O‟Keefe, P. (2001) Redefining Sustainable Development, London: Pluto Press.
Norgaard, R.B. (1994) Development Betrayed: The End of Progress and a Coevolutionary Revisioning of the
Future, London: Routledge.
Robinson, J. (2004) „Squaring the circle? Some thoughts on the idea of sustainable development‟, Ecological
Economics, 48(4): 369-384.
Sneddon, C., Howarth, R.B. and Norgaard, R.B. (2006) „Sustainable development in a post-Brundtland world‟,
Ecological Economics, 57(2): 253-268.

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Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 3: World Summits in Stockholm, Rio and Johannesburg

Essential
Haas, P.M. (2002) „UN conferences and constructivist governance of the environment‟, Global Governance,
8(1): 73-91.

Recommended
Adams, W.M. (2009) Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World, London:
Routledge, chapter 4.
Ayre, G. and Callway, R. (2005) „Outcomes from the World Summit on Sustainable Development‟, in G. Ayre
and R. Callway (eds) Governance for Sustainable Development: A Foundation for the Future,
London: Earthscan, and chapter 3.
Baker, S. (2006) Sustainable Development, Abingdon: Routledge, chapter 3.
Bernstein, S. 2002. Liberal environmentalism and global environmental governance. Global Environmental
Politics, 2(3): 1-16.
Brenton, T. (1994) The Greening of Machiavelli: The Evolution of International Environmental Politics,
London: RIIA and Earthscan.
Chasek, P.S. (2001) Earth Negotiations: Analyzing Thirty Years of Environmental Diplomacy, Tokyo: UNUP.
Chasek, P.S., Downie, D.L., and Brown, J.W. (2010) Global Environmental Politics, Boulder, CO: Westview,
chapter 2.
Chatterjee, P. and Finger, M. (1994) The Earth Brokers: Power, Politics and World Development, London:
Routledge.
Conca, K. (2000) „The WTO and the undermining of global environmental governance‟, Review of
International Political Economy, 7(3): 484-494.
Clapp, J, and Dauvergne, P. (2005) Paths to a Green World: The Political Economy of the Global
Environment, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, chapter 3.
Death, C. (2010) Governing Sustainable Development: Partnerships, Protests and Power at the World
Summit, Abingdon: Routledge, chapter 3.
Fomerand, J. (1996) „UN conferences: Media events or genuine diplomacy?‟ Global Governance, 2(3): 361-
375.
Grubb, M., Koch, M., Munson, A., Sullivan, F. and Thomson, K. (1993) The Earth Summit Agreements: A
Guide and Assessment, London: Earthscan.
Harrison, N.E. (2000) Constructing Sustainable Development, New York; SUNY, chapter 6.
Imber, M. (1996) „The environment and the United Nations‟, in J. Vogler and M. Imber (eds) The Environment
and International Relations, London: Routledge. [Studypack]
Jordan, A. and Voisey, H. (1998) „The “Rio Process”: The politics and substantive outcomes of “Earth Summit
II”‟, Global Environmental Change, 8(1): 93-97.
Lanchberry, J. (1996) „The Rio Earth Summit‟, in D.H. Dunn (ed.) Diplomacy at the Highest Level: The
Evolution of International Summitry, Basingstoke: Macmillan.
Middleton, N. and O‟Keefe, P. (2003) Rio Plus Ten: Politics, Poverty and the Environment, London: Pluto
Press.
Najam, A. (2005) „Developing countries and global environmental governance: From contestation to
participation to engagement‟, International Environmental Agreements, 5(3): 303-321.
Osborn, D. (2001) „Introduction‟, in F. Dodds (ed.) Earth Summit 2002: A New Deal, London: Earthscan.
Sanwal, M. (2007) „Evolution of global environmental governance and the United Nations‟, Global
Environmental Politics, 7(3): 1-12.
UN (1992) Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, Rio: UN. Available online
http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?documentid=78
13

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 4: Green states: International cooperation and domestic reform

Essential
Eckersley, R. (2004) The Green State: Rethinking Democracy and Sovereignty, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press,
introduction. [Studypack]

Recommended
Andresen, S. and Hey, E. (2005) „The effectiveness and legitimacy of international environmental institutions‟,
International Environmental Agreements, 5(3): 211-226.
Barry, J. (2005) „Ecological modernisation‟, in Dryzek, J.S. and Schlosberg, D. (eds) Debating the Earth: The
Environmental Politics Reader, Oxford: OUP, 303-321.
Barry, J. and Eckersley, R. (eds) (2005) The State and the Global Ecological Crisis, Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, introduction and chapters 1, 2, 9, 12.
Dryzek, J.S. (2005) The Politics of the Earth: Environmental Discourses, Oxford: OUP, chapter 4.
Dryzek, J.S., Hunold, C., Schlosberg, D., Downes, D., and Hernes, H.-K. (2002) „The Environmental
Transformation of the State: The USA, Norway, Germany and the UK‟, Political Studies, 50(4): 659-
682.
Goldman, M. (2001) „The birth of a discipline: Producing authoritative knowledge, World Bank-style‟,
Ethnography, 2(2): 191-217.
Haque, M.S. (1999) „The fate of sustainable development under neo-liberal regimes in developing countries‟,
International Political Science Review, 20(2): 197-218.
Luke, T.W. (1999) „Eco-managerialism: Environmental studies as a power/knowledge formation‟, in F. Fischer
and M.A. Hajer (eds) Living With Nature: Environmental Politics as Cultural Discourse, Oxford: OUP.
Meadowcroft, J. (1997) „Planning, democracy and the challenge of sustainable development‟, International
Political Science Review, 18(2): 167-189.
Meadowcroft, J. (2007) „National sustainable development strategies: features, challenges and reflexivity‟,
European Environment, 17(3): 152-163.
Mol, A.P.J. and Spaargeren, G. (2000) „Ecological modernization theory in debate: A review‟, Environmental
Politics, 9(1): 17-49.
Paterson, M. (1995) „Radicalizing regimes? Ecology and the critique of IR theory‟, in J. Macmillan and A.
Linklater (ed.) Boundaries in Question: New Directions in International Relations, London: Pinter.
Paehlke, R. and Torgerson, D. (eds) (1990) Managing Leviathan: Environmental Politics and the
Administrative State, London: Belhaven Press.
UK Government (2005) Securing the Future: Delivering UK Sustainable Development Strategy, London: HM
Government. Available at http://www.defra.gov.uk/sustainable/government/publications/uk-strategy/
Young, O. (1989) „The politics of international regime formation: Managing natural resources and the
environment‟, International Organization, 43(3): 349-375.
Young, O. (1994) International Governance: Protecting the Environment in a Stateless Society, Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press.
Young, Z. (2002) A New Green Order: The World Bank and the Politics of the Global Environmental Facility,
London: Pluto Press.
Weale, A. (2009) „Governance, government and the pursuit of sustainability‟, in W.N. Adger and A. Jordan
(eds) Governing Sustainability, Cambridge: CUP.
Whitehead, M. (2008) „Cold monsters and ecological leviathans: Reflections on the relationships between
states and the environment‟, Geography Compass, 2(2): 414-432.
Whitehead, M., Jones, R. and Jones, M. (2007) The nature of the state: Excavating the political ecologies of
the modern state, Oxford: OUP.

14

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 5: Civic participation and sustainable citizenship programmes

Essential
Dryzek, J.S. (2005) The Politics of the Earth: Environmental Discourses, Oxford: OUP, chapter 5.
[Studypack]

Recommended
Bäckstrand, K. (2006) „Democratizing global environmental governance? Stakeholder democracy after the
World Summit on Sustainable Development‟, European Journal of International Relations, 12(4): 467-
498.
Baker, S. (2006) Sustainable Development, Abingdon: Routledge, chapter 5.
Conca, K. (1995) „Greening the United Nations: Environmental organizations and the UN system‟, Third World
Quarterly, 16(3): 441-457.
Dobson, A. (2003) Citizenship and the Environment, Oxford: OUP.
Dobson, A. (2009) „Citizens, citizenship and governance for sustainability‟, in W.N. Adger and A. Jordan (eds)
Governing Sustainability, Cambridge: CUP.
Küpçü, M.F. (2005) „Society: Participation and engagement‟, in G. Ayre and R. Callway (eds) Governance for
Sustainable Development: A Foundation for the Future, London: Earthscan.
Mwangi, W. (2005) „Three decades of NGO activism in international environmental negotiations: Who
influences NGOs?‟ in A.C. Kalhauge, G. Sjöstedt and E. Correll (eds) Global Challenges: Furthering
the Multilateral Process for Sustainable Development, Sheffield: Greenleaf.
Raustiala, K. (1997) „States, NGOs and international environmental institutions‟, International Studies
Quarterly, 41(4): 719-740.
Smith, G. (2004) „Liberal democracy and the shaping of environmentally enlightened citizens‟, in M.
Wissenburg and Y. Levy (eds) Liberal Democracy and Environmentalism: The End of
Environmentalism? London: Routledge.
UN (1992) Agenda 21, Rio: UN, introduction.
Available online at http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?documentid=52
Whitehead, M. (2007) Spaces of Sustainability: Geographical Perspectives on the Sustainable Society,
London; Routledge, chapter 8.
WorldWatch (2010) State of the World: Transforming cultures from consumerism to sustainability, London:
Earthscan, especially pp. 57-61 and 151-169.

15

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 6: Capitalism and Sustainability: Carbon Trading Schemes

Essential
Bulkeley, H. and Newell, P. (2010) Governing Climate Change, London: Routledge, chapter 5. [Studypack]

Recommended
Adams, W.M. (2009) Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World, London:
Routledge, chapter 5.
Bachram, H. (2004) „Climate Fraud and Carbon Colonialism: The New Trade in Greenhouse Gases‟,
Capitalism, Nature, Socialism, 15(4): 5-20.
Bäckstrand, K. and Lövbrand, E. (2006) „Planting Trees to Mitigate Climate Change: Contested Discourses of
Ecological Modernization, Green Governmentality, and Civic Environmentalism‟, Global
Environmental Politics, 6(1): 50-75.
Baker, S. (2006) Sustainable Development, Abingdon: Routledge, chapter 6.
Betsill, M. (2006) „Cities and the Multilevel Governance of Global Climate Change‟, Global Governance, 12(2):
141-159.
Bruno, K. and Karliner, J. (2002) earthsummit.biz: The Corporate Takeover of Sustainable Development,
Oakland, CA: Food First Books.
Conca, K., Princen, T., and Maniates, M.F. (2001) „Confronting Consumption‟, Global Environmental Politics,
1(3): 1-10.
Clapp, J, and Dauvergne, P. (2005) Paths to a Green World: The Political Economy of the Global
Environment, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, chapters 4-7.
Dryzek, J.S. (2005) The Politics of the Earth: Environmental Discourses, Oxford: OUP, chapters 6 and 8.
Dryzek, J.S. and Schlosberg, D. (eds) (2005) Debating the Earth: The Environmental Politics Reader, Oxford:
OUP, chapters 15-17 and 21-22.
Falkner, R. (2003) „Private Environmental Governance and International Relations: Exploring the Links‟,
Global Environmental Politics, 3(2): 72-87.
Harrison, N.E. (2000) Constructing Sustainable Development, New York; SUNY, chapter 3.
Holliday, C.O., Schmidheiny, S. and Watts, P. (2002) Walking the Talk: The Business Case for Sustainability,
Sheffield: Greenleaf Publishing.
Langhelle, O. (2000) „Why ecological modernization and sustainable development should not be conflated‟,
Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning, 2(4): 303-322.
Lohmann, L. (2006) Carbon Trading: A Critical Conversation on Climate Change, Privatization and Power,
Development Dialogue, 48, Uppsala: Dag Hammarskjold Centre and Corner House. Available online
at http://www.dhf.uu.se/pdffiler/DD2006_48_carbon_trading/carbon_trading_web.pdf
Murphy, D.F. and Bendell, J. (1999) Partners in Time? Business, NGOs and Sustainable Development,
Geneva: UNRISD.
Paterson, M. (2000) „Car Culture and Global Environmental Politics‟, Review of International Studies, 26(2):
253-270.
Paterson, M. (2009) „Global governance for sustainable capitalism? The political economy of global
environmental governance‟, in W.N. Adger and A. Jordan (eds) Governing Sustainability, Cambridge:
CUP.
Paterson, M. and Stripple, J. (2010) „My Space: Governing individuals‟ carbon emissions‟, Environment and
Planning D: Society and Space, 28(2): 341-362.
Pearce, D. and Barbier, E.B. (2000) Blueprint for a Sustainable Economy, London: Earthscan.
Princen, T., Maniates, M., and Conca, K. (eds) (2002) Confronting Consumption, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

16

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 7: Climate change and global insecurity

Essential
Barnett, J. and Adger, W.N. (2007) „Climate change, human security and violent conflict‟, Political Geography,
26(6): 639-55.

Recommended
Baker, S. (2006) Sustainable Development, Abingdon: Routledge, chapter 4.
Bulkeley, H. and Newell, P. (2010) Governing Climate Change, London: Routledge.
Chasek, P.S., Downie, D.L., and Brown, J.W. (2010) Global Environmental Politics, Boulder, CO: Westview,
chapter 4.
Christoff, P. (2010) „Cold climate in Copenhagen: China and the United States at COP15‟, Environmental
Politics, 19(4): 637-656.
Eckersley, R. (2007) „Ambushed: The Kyoto Protocol, The Bush Administration‟s climate policy and the
erosion of legitimacy‟, International Politics, 44(2): 306-324.
Jagers, S.C. and Stripple, J. (2003) „Climate Governance beyond the State‟, Global Governance, 9(3): 385-
399.
Nordås, R. and Gleditsch, N.P. (2007) „Climate change and conflict‟, Political Geography, 26(6): 627-38.
Oels, A. (2005) „Rendering climate change governable: From biopower to advanced liberal governmentality‟,
Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning, 7(3): 185-207.
Okereke, C., Bulkeley, H., and Schroeder, H. (2009) „Conceptualising Climate Governance beyond the
International Regime‟, Global Environmental Politics, 9(1): 58-78.
Paterson, M. (1996) „Neorealism, neoinstitutionalism and the Climate Change Convention‟, in J. Vogler and
M. Imber (eds) The Environment and International Relations, London: Routledge.
Raleigh, C. and Urdal, H. (2007) „Climate change, environmental degradation and armed conflict‟, Political
Geography, 26(6): 674-94.
Sokona, Y., Najam, A. and Huq, S. (2002) Climate Change and Sustainable Development: Views from the
South, London: IIED.
Toulmin, C. (2009) Climate Change in Africa, London: Zed Books.

17

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 8: Environmental security and the Toronto School

Essential
Barnett, J. (2001) The meaning of environmental security: Ecological politics and policy in the new security
era, London: Zed Books, chapters 1-2. [Chapter 1 in studypack, short loan copies in Hugh Owen]

Recommended
Barnett, J. (2000) „Destabilizing the environment-conflict thesis‟, Review of International Studies, 26(2): 271-
288.
Buzan, B. (1991) People, States and Fear: An Agenda for International Security Studies in the Post-Cold War
Era, Hemel Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf.
Conca, K. and Dabelko. G. (eds) (2004) Green Planet Blues: Four Decades of Global Environmental Politics,
Boulder, CO: Westview Press, chapters 27-31.
Dalby, S. (2009) Security and Environmental Change, Cambridge: Polity Press. [Chapter 1 in studypack]
Deudney, D. (1990) „The case against linking environmental degradation and national security‟, Millennium,
19(3): 461-76.
Dyer, H. (2001) „Environmental security and international relations: The case for enclosure‟, Review of
International Studies, 27(3): 441-450.
Hartmann, B. (1998) „Population, environment and security: A new trinity‟, Environment and Urbanization,
10(2): 113-127.
Homer-Dixon, T.F. (1991) „On the threshold: Environmental changes as causes of acute conflict‟, International
Security, 16(2): 76-116.
Homer-Dixon, T.F. (1994) „Environmental Scarcities and Violent Conflict: Evidence from cases‟, International
Security, 19(1): 5-40.
Kaplan, R.D. (1994) „The coming anarchy: How scarcity, crime, overpopulation, tribalism, and disease are
rapidly destroying the social fabric of our planet‟, Atlantic Monthly, 273(2): 44-76.
Khagram, S., Clark, W.C., and Raad, D.F. (2003) „From the environment and human security to sustainable
security and development‟, Journal of Human Development, 4(2): 289-313.
Matthew, R.A., Barnett, J., McDonald, B. and O'Brien, K. (eds) (2009) Global Environmental Change and
Human Security, Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Penders, M.J. and Thomas, W.L. (2002) „Ecoterror: Rethinking environmental security after September 11‟,
Natural Resources and Environment, 16, 159-208.
Swatuk, L.A. (2006) „Environmental security‟, in M.M. Betsill, K. Hochstetler, and D. Stevis (eds) Palgrave
Advances in International Environmental Politics, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 203-36.

18

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 9: Water wars and food security

Essential
Postel, S. and Wolf, A.T. (2001) „Dehydrating conflict‟, Foreign Policy, 126: 60-67.
Dupont, A. and Thirlwell, M. (2009) „A new era of food insecurity‟, Survival, 51(3): 71-98.

Recommended
Adams, W.M. (2009) Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World, London:
Routledge, chapters 8 and 11.
Alam, U.Z. (2002) „Questioning the water wars rationale: A case study of the Indus Waters Treaty‟, The
Geographical Journal, 168(4): 341-353.
Daly, G. et al (1998) „Food production, population growth, and environmental security‟, working paper,
available online at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=128269
Gleick, P.H. (1993) „Water and conflict: Fresh water resources and international security‟, International
Security, 18(1): 79-112.
Goodman, D. and Watts, M. (eds) (1997) Globalising Food: Agrarian questions and global restructuring,
London: Routledge.
Hoddinott, J., Cohen, M.J. and Barrett, C.B. (2008) „Renegotiating the food aid convention: Background,
context and issues‟, Global Governance, 14(3): 283-304.
Keen, D. (2008) Complex Emergencies, Cambridge: Polity Press, chapter 5.
Klare, M.T. (2002) Resource Wars: The new landscape of global conflict, New York: Henry Holt, chapters 6-7.
Lee, B. (2009) „Managing the interlocking climate and resource challenges‟, International Affairs, 85(6): 1101-
16.
Shiva, V. (2002) Water wars: Privatization, pollution and profit, Cambridge, MA: South End Press.
Starr, J.R. (1991) „Water wars‟, Foreign Policy, 82: 17-36.
Swain, A. (2001) „Water wars: Fact or fiction?‟ Futures, 33: 769-781.
Thomas, C. (2008) „Poverty, development, and hunger‟, in Baylis, Smith and Owens (eds) The Globalization
of World Politics: An Introduction to International Relations, Oxford: OUP.
UN (2009) Third UN World Water Development Report: Water in a Changing World, available online at
http://www.unesco.org/water/wwap/wwdr/wwdr3/tableofcontents.shtml
De Villers, M. (2001) Water Wars: Is the world’s water running out? London: Phoenix.
Wolf, A.T., Kramer, A., Carius, A. and Dabelko, G.D. (2006) Water can be a pathway to peace, not war.
Woodrow Wilson International Centre for Scholars. Available from:
http://www.wilsoncenter.org/topics/pubs/NavigatingPeaceIssue1.pdf

19

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 10: Violent environments: Resource wars or resource curses?

Essential
Peluso, N.L. and Watts, M. (2001) „Violent Environments‟, in N.L. Peluso and M. Watts (eds) Violent
Environments, Ithaca; Cornell, chapter 1 [Studypack] [see also chapters 2, 9]

Recommended
Bannon, I. and Collier, P. (2003) Natural Resources and Violent Conflict: Options and Actions, Washington:
World Bank.
Collier, P. (2010) The Plundered Planet: Why we must – and how we can – manage nature for global
prosperity, Oxford: OUP.
Conca, K. and Wallace, J. (2009) „Environment and peacebuilding in war-torn societies: Lessons from the UN
Environment Programme‟s experience in post-conflict assessment‟, Global Governance, 15(4): 485-
504.
Gleditsch, N.P. (1998) „Armed conflict and the environment: A critique of the literature‟, Journal of Peace
Research, 35(3): 381-400.
Klare, M.T. (2002) Resource Wars: The new landscape of global conflict, New York: Henry Holt.
Klare, M.T. and Volman, D. (2006) „America, China and the Scramble for Africa‟s Oil‟, Review of African
Political Economy, 33(106): 297-309.
Le Billion, P. (2001) „The political ecology of war: natural resources and armed conflict‟, Political Geography,
20(5): 561-584.
Peluso, N.L. (1993) „Coercing conservation: The politics of state resource control‟, in R.D. Lipschutz and K.
Conca (eds) The State and Social Power in Global Environmental Politics, New York: Columbia
University Press, 46-70.
Renner, M. (2002) „The anatomy of resource wars‟, WorldWatch Paper 162, available online at
http://www.worldwatch.org/system/files/EWP162.pdf
Richards, P. (2001) „Are “forest” wars in Africa resource conflicts? The case of Sierra Leone‟, in N.L. Peluso
and M. Watts (eds) Violent Environments, Ithaca: Cornell, chapter 3.
Ross, M. (2004) „What do we know about natural resources and civil war?‟ Journal of Peace Research, 41(3):
337-356.
Sachs, W. and Santarius, T. (eds) (2005) Fair Future: Resource Conflicts, Security and Global Justice,
London: Zed, chapter 3.

20

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 11: Conflict: The Ogoni and the Niger Delta

Essential
Mistilis, K. (2009) „Niger Delta Standoff‟, Foreign Policy In Focus, Washington, DC: July 9. Available online at
http://www.fpif.org/articles/niger_delta_standoff

Recommended
Agbola, T. and Alabi, M. (2003) „Political economy of petroleum resources development, environmental
injustice and selective victimization: A case study of the Niger Delta region of Nigeria‟, in J. Agyeman,
R.D. Bullard, and B. Evans (eds) Just Sustainabilities: Development in an Unequal World, London;
Earthscan.
Iklegbe, A. (2001) „Civil society, oil and conflict in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria: Ramifications of civil
society for a regional resource struggle‟, Journal of Modern African Studies, 39(3): 437-469.
Inokoba, P.K. and Imbua, D.L. (2009) „Vexation and militancy in the Niger Delta: The way forward‟, Journal of
Human Ecology, 29(2): 101-120.
Obi, C.I. (2001) „Global, state and local intersections: Power, authority and conflict in the Niger Delta oil
communities‟, in T. M. Callaghy, R. Kassimir, and R. Latham (eds) Intervention and transnationalism
in Africa: global-local networks of power, Cambridge: CUP.
Osaghae, E.E. (1995) „The Ogoni Uprising: Oil politics, minority agitation, and the future of the Nigerian
State‟, African Affairs, 94(376): 325-344.
Watts, M. (1998) „Nature as artifice and artifact‟, in Braun, B. and Castree, N. (eds) Remaking Reality: Nature
at the Millenium London: Routledge, 243-268.
Watts, M. (2001) „Petro-violence: Community, extraction and political ecology of a mythic community‟, in N.L.
Peluso and M. Watts (eds) Violent Environments, Ithaca: Cornell, chapter 8.
Watts, M (2004) „Resource curse? Governmentality, oil and power in the Niger Delta‟, Geopolitics, 9(1): 50-
80.

21

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 12: Conservation: The Peace Park Movement

Essential
Ali, S.H. (2007) „Introduction‟, in S.H. Ali (ed.) Peace Parks: Conservation and Conflict Resolution,
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. [Studypack]

Recommended
Adams, W.M. (2009) Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World, London:
Routledge, chapter 10.
Avant, D. 2004. „Conserving nature in the state of nature: the politics of INGO policy implementation‟, Review
of International Studies, 30(3): 361–82.
Beinart, W. and Coates, P. (1995) Environment and History: The taming of nature in the USA and South
Africa, Routledge; London, chapter 6.
Beinart W. and Hughes, L. (2007) Environment and Empire, Oxford: OUP, chapter 17.
Brechin, S.R., Wilshusen, P.R., Fortwangler, C.L. and West, P.C. (eds) (2003) Contested Nature: Promoting
International Biodiversity with Social Justice in the Twenty-first Century, New York: SUNY Press.
Brockington, D. 2009. Celebrity and the Environment: Fame, wealth and power in conservation. London: Zed
Books.
Brockington, D. and Igoe, J. (2006) „Eviction for Conservation: A Global Overview‟, Conservation and Society
4(3): 424-70.
Brockington, D., Duffy, R. and Igoe, J. (2008) Nature unbound, London: Earthscan. [National library]
Bryant, R.L. (2009) „Born to be wild? Non-governmental organisations, politics and the environment‟,
Geography Compass, 3/4: 1540-58.
Büscher, B. (2010) „Derivative Nature: Interrogating the value of conservation in “Boundless Southern Africa”‟,
Third World Quarterly, 31(2): 259-76.
Nelson, F. and Agrawal, A. (2008) „Patronage or participation? Community-based natural resource
management reform in sub-Saharan Africa‟, Development and Change, 39(4): 557-85.
Neumann, R.P. „Disciplining peasants in Tanzania: From state violence to self-surveillance in wildlife
conservation‟, in N.L. Peluso and M. Watts (eds) Violent Environments, Ithaca: Cornell, chapter 13.

22

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 13: Pollution: Environmental Justice Movements in the USA and South Africa

Essential
Harvey, D. (1999) „The environment of justice‟, in F. Fischer and M.A. Hajer (eds) Living With Nature:
Environmental Politics as Cultural Discourse, Oxford: OUP. [Studypack]

Recommended
Adams, W.M. (2009) Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World, London:
Routledge, chapter 12.
Agyeman, J., Bullard, R.D., and Evans, B. (2003) „Introduction‟, in J. Agyeman, R.D. Bullard, and B. Evans
(eds) Just Sustainabilities: Development in an Unequal World, London: Earthscan, and chapters 6-10.
Beinart, W. and Coates, P. (1995) Environment and History: The taming of nature in the USA and South
Africa, Routledge; London, chapter 1.
Bond, P. (2002) Unsustainable South Africa: Environment, Development and Social Protest, London: Merlin
Press, chapter 7.
Camacho, D. (1998) Environmental Injustices, Political Struggles: Race, Class, and the Environment,
Durham: Duke University Press.
Cock, J. and Fig, D. (2001) „The impact of globalization on environmental politics, 1990-2002‟, African
Sociological Review, 5(2): 15-35.
Dryzek, J.S. and Schlosberg, D. (eds) (2005) Debating the Earth: The Environmental Politics Reader, Oxford:
OUP, chapters 30-32.
Death, C. (2006) „Resisting (nuclear) power? Environmental regulation in South Africa‟, Review of African
Political Economy, 33(109): 407-424.
Edwards, B. (1995) „With Liberty and Environmental Justice For All: The Emergence and Challenge of
Grassroots Environmentalism in the United States‟, in B.R. Taylor (ed.) Ecological Resistance
Movements: The Global Emergence of Radical and Popular Environmentalism, Albany: SUNY,
chapter 2.
Jacobs, N. (2003) Environment, Power, and Injustice: A South African History. Cambridge: CUP.
Khan, F. (2002) „The roots of environmental racism and the rise of environmental justice in the 1990s‟, in D.A.
McDonald (ed.) Environmental Justice in South Africa, Athens, OH: Ohio University Press.
McDonald, D.A. (2002) „Introduction: What is environmental justice?‟ in D.A. McDonald (ed.) Environmental
Justice in South Africa, Athens, OH: Ohio University Press.
Mittelman, J.H. (1998) „Globalization and environmental resistance politics‟, Third World Quarterly, 19(5): 847-
872.
Schlosberg, D. (1999) Environmental Justice and the New Pluralism, Oxford: OUP.

23

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 14: Sustainability: Transition towns and climate camps in the UK

Essential
Seyfang, G. (2009) Green shoots of sustainability: The 2009 UK transition movement survey, available online
at http://transitionculture.org/wp-content/uploads/green-shoots-of-sustainability.pdf
Also look at the Climate Camp Cymru website http://climatecampcymru.org/

Recommended
Agyeman, J. and Evans, B. (2004) „”Just Sustainability”: The emerging discourse of environmental justice in
Britain?‟ The Geographical Journal, 170(2): 155-164.
Bulkeley, H. and Newell, P. (2010) Governing Climate Change, London: Routledge, chapter 4 (esp. pp. 80-3).
Dobson, A. (2007) Green Political Thought, fourth edition, Abingdon: Routledge, chapter 4, especially pp.
124-6.
Doherty, B., Plows, A., and Wall, D. (2007) „Environmental direct action in Manchester, Oxford and North
Wales: A protest event analysis‟, Environmental Politics, 16(5): 805-25.
Hale, S. (2010) „The new politics of climate change: Why we are failing and how we will succeed‟,
Environmental Politics, 19(2), 255-75
Paterson, M. and Barry, J. (2005) „Modernizing the British State: Ecological contradictions in New Labour‟s
Economic Strategy‟, in J. Barry and R. Eckersley (eds) The State and the Global Ecological Crisis,
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, chapter 3.
Rootes, C. (2005) „A limited transnationalization? The British Environmental Movement‟, in D. Della Porta and
S. Tarrow (eds) Transnational Protest and Global Activism, Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield.
Rootes, C. (2006) „Facing South? British Environmental movement organisations and the challenge of
globalisation‟, Environmental Politics, 15(5): 768-786.
Rüdig, W. (1995) „Between Moderation and Marginalization: Environmental Radicalism in Britain‟, in B.R.
Taylor (ed.) Ecological Resistance Movements: The Global Emergence of Radical and Popular
Environmentalism, Albany: SUNY, chapter 12.
Saunders, C. (2008) „The Stop Climate Chaos Coalition: Climate change as a development issue‟, Third
World Quarterly, 29(8): 1509-26.
Seel, B., Paterson, M. and Doherty, B. (eds) (2000) Direct Action in British Environmentalism, London:
Routledge.
Wapner, P. (1995) „In defence of banner hangers: The dark green politics of Greenpeace‟, in B.R. Taylor (ed.)
Ecological Resistance Movements: The Global Emergence of Radical and Popular Environmentalism,
Albany, NY: SUNY.

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Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 15: Environmentalism and environmentalists

Essential
Naess, A. (2005) „The shallow and the deep, long-range ecology movement: A summary‟, in Dryzek, J.S. and
Schlosberg, D. (eds) Debating the Earth: The Environmental Politics Reader, Oxford: OUP, chapter
23. [Studypack]

Recommended
Adams, W.M. (2009) Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World, London:
Routledge, chapter 7.
Blühdorn, I. (2006) „Self-Experience in the Theme Park of Radical Action? Social Movements and Political
Articulation in the Late-Modern Condition‟, European Journal of Social Theory, 9(1): 23-42.
Bomberg, E. (1998) Green parties and politics in the European Union, London: Routledge.
Doherty, B. (2002), Ideas and Actions in the Green Movement. London: Routledge. [National Library]
Doherty, B. and Doyle, T. (2006) „Beyond borders: Transnational politics, social movements and modern
environmentalisms‟, Environmental Politics, 15(5): 697-712.
Dryzek, J.S. (2005) The Politics of the Earth: Environmental Discourses, Oxford: OUP, chapters 9-10.
Haynes, J. (1999) „Power, politics, and environmental movements in the Third World‟, Environmental Politics,
8(1), 222-242.
O‟Riordan, T. (1981) Environmentalism, London: Pion.
Paterson, M., Humphreys, D., Pettiford, L. (2003) „Conceptualizing environmental governance: From
interstate regimes to counter-hegemonic struggles‟, Global Environmental Politics, 3(2): 1-10.
Peet, R. and Watts, M. (eds) (2004) Liberation Ecologies: Environment, Development and Social Movements,
London: Routledge.
Princen, T. & Finger, M. (1994) Environmental NGOs in World Politics: Linking the Local and the Global,
London and New York: Routledge.
Princen, T., Maniates, M. and Conca, K. (eds) (2002) Confronting Consumption, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press,
chapters 3, 9 and 13.
Richardson, D. and Rootes, C. (eds) (1995) The Green challenge: The development of Green parties in
Europe, London: Routledge.
Sen, G. (2004) „Women, poverty, population: Issues for the concerned environmentalist‟, in Conca, K. and
Dabelko. G. (eds) Green Planet Blues: Four Decades of Global Environmental Politics, Boulder, CO:
Westview Press, chapter 34.
Shellenberger, M. and Nordhaus, T. (2004) „The Death of Environmentalism: Global Warming Politics in a
Post-Environmental World‟.
Available online at http://www.thebreakthrough.org/PDF/Death_of_Environmentalism.pdf
Taylor, B.R. (ed.) (1995) Ecological Resistance Movements: The Global Emergence of Radical and Popular
Environmentalism, Albany; SUNY.
Wapner, P. (1995) „Politics beyond the State: Environmental Activism and World Civic Politics‟, World Politics,
47(3): 311-40.
Wapner, P. (2002) „Horizontal politics: Transnational environmental activism and global cultural change‟,
Global Environmental Politics, 2(2): 37-62.
Wapner, P. (2010) Living Through the End of Nature: The Future of American Environmentalism, Cambridge,
MA: MIT Press.
Wissenburg, M. and Levy, Y. (eds) (2004) Liberal Democracy and Environmentalism: The End of
Environmentalism? London: Routledge, especially chapters 1 and 14.
WorldWatch (2010) State of the World: Transforming cultures from consumerism to sustainability, London:
Earthscan, especially pp. 171-190.

25

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Lecture 16: Conclusion

Adams, W.M. (2009) Green Development: Environment and Sustainability in the Third World, London:
Routledge, chapter 13. [Studypack]
Blühdorn, I. and Welsh, I. (2007) „Eco-politics beyond the paradigm of sustainability: A conceptual framework
and research agenda‟, Environmental Politics, 16(2): 185-188.

26

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Seminar Programme

Each seminar with involve a mixture of activities, with assessed student presentations, discussion
of the readings and lectures, and other set exercises. The seminars will be 1 hour and 50 minutes
(with a 10 minute break), and so considerable preparation is expected, both in terms of the required
reading, and any other set exercises.

Seminar 1: Sustainability

During this first seminar we will begin with introductions and discuss the course structure. We will
assign presentation groups for the remaining seminars. We will then discuss the essential reading,
so it is very important that EVERYONE has read the following texts.

Essential reading: Brundtland, G.H. (1987) Our Common Future: World Commission on
Environment and Development, Oxford: OUP, chapter 2 [also available online at http://www.un-
documents.net/ocf-02.htm] AND Sneddon, C., Howarth, R.B. and Norgaard, R.B. (2006) „Sustainable
development in a post-Brundtland world‟, Ecological Economics, 57(2): 253-268.

In class exercise: „The personal is political‟. During this seminar we will also be discussing ways in
which our own personal lives are implicated in global environmental politics. As such there will be a
short questionnaire circulated prior to the seminar, which I would like you to complete. We will
discuss the results in the seminar, as well as discussing the creation and maintenance of personal
blogs that are to run during the semester.

Seminar 2: Climate change

During this class we will have student presentations on (some or all of) the following topics: the
IPCC and climate science; the EU Emissions Trading Scheme; the Clean Development
Mechanism; the Kyoto process and the post-Copenhagen climate negotiations; and the effects of
climate change. These will be assessed presentations, accompanied by short powerpoint
presentations and class handouts. Those who are not presenting will be expected to listen and ask
questions.

During the seminar we will also discuss the following key readings. As with every seminar, it is
vitally important that everyone has read these texts carefully, as we will be discussing them closely
in class.

Essential reading: Paterson, M. and Stripple, J. (2010) „My Space: Governing individuals‟ carbon
emissions‟, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 28, 341-362 AND the Executive
Summary of the UK Government‟s „Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change‟ [available
online at http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/sternreview_index.htm].

27

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University
Seminar 3: Environmental security

In this class we will have student presentations on (some or all of) the following topics: food
security; water security; desertification; GMOs; the politics of oil; and the military and the
environment. These will be assessed presentations, accompanied by short powerpoint
presentations and class handouts. Those who are not presenting will be expected to listen and ask
questions.

During the seminar we will also discuss the following key reading. As with every seminar, it is vitally
important that everyone has read this text carefully, as we will be discussing it closely in class.

Essential readings: Barnett, J. (2000) „Destabilizing the environment-conflict thesis‟, Review of


International Studies, 26(2): 271-288.

In class exercise: The Security Council and climate change. We will run a role-playing exercise in
the second half of the class, based around the UK‟s attempted introduction of global climate change
as a topic for discussion in 2007.
See http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/apr/16/greenpolitics.climatechange We will assign roles
representing the permanent and temporary members of the Security Council prior to the seminar,
as well as briefing cards on your positions.

Seminar 4: Environmental social movements

In this class we will have student presentations on social movements of your own choice. These will
be assessed presentations, accompanied by short powerpoint presentations and class handouts.
Those who are not presenting will be expected to listen and ask questions.

During the seminar we will also discuss the following key reading. As with every seminar, it is vitally
important that everyone has read this text carefully, as we will be discussing it closely in class.

Essential reading: Shellenberger, M. and Nordhaus, T. (2004) „The Death of Environmentalism:


Global Warming Politics in a Post-Environmental World‟, available online at
http://www.thebreakthrough.org/PDF/Death_of_Environmentalism.pdf

During this class we will also discuss some of the broader issues that the course raises, centering
on the following question: “is liberal democracy capable of resolving the environmental crisis?” We
will have a class debate addressing this topic.

28

Adran Gwleidyddiaeth Ryngwladol The Department of International Politics


Prifysgol Aberystwyth Aberystwyth University

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