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Broad appeal because it analyses so many different world regions.
Addresses both traditional and “new” security paradigms.
Much of the discussion surrounding the definition of the
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the post-2015 global
development agenda has contextualized sustainable development
within the framework of 'transformation', specifically prioritizing
concepts such as equity, security, justice, and rights. While these
debates correctly discussed power imbalances and relational
obstacles to human development they have remained abstract because
they focused only on the international level. In this regard,
discussions have not adequately examined mechanisms that facilitate
or block the emergence of sustainable development as a political
priority, nor do they address specific policy proposals to link
environmental justice to human development strategies. This book
contends that human and environmental security should be framed in
terms of transnational discussions rather than being limited to
general international debates in order to examine both governance
challenges and potential policy mechanisms that can effectively
address environmental security issues that cross national
boundaries. The chapters in this volume undertake an empirical
examination of the relationships between human and environmental
security, cross-border exchanges, and regional integration. They
address the relationships between international norms,
transnational human and environmental security issues, and the
regionalization of governance in different parts of the world as
the book includes comparative analyses as well as case studies from
Europe, Asia and the Americas. The chapters originally published as
a special issue in Globalizations.
Much of the discussion surrounding the definition of the
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the post-2015 global
development agenda has contextualized sustainable development
within the framework of 'transformation', specifically prioritizing
concepts such as equity, security, justice, and rights. While these
debates correctly discussed power imbalances and relational
obstacles to human development they have remained abstract because
they focused only on the international level. In this regard,
discussions have not adequately examined mechanisms that facilitate
or block the emergence of sustainable development as a political
priority, nor do they address specific policy proposals to link
environmental justice to human development strategies. This book
contends that human and environmental security should be framed in
terms of transnational discussions rather than being limited to
general international debates in order to examine both governance
challenges and potential policy mechanisms that can effectively
address environmental security issues that cross national
boundaries. The chapters in this volume undertake an empirical
examination of the relationships between human and environmental
security, cross-border exchanges, and regional integration. They
address the relationships between international norms,
transnational human and environmental security issues, and the
regionalization of governance in different parts of the world as
the book includes comparative analyses as well as case studies from
Europe, Asia and the Americas. The chapters originally published as
a special issue in Globalizations.
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