Upending Climate Violence Research: Fossil Fuel Corporations and the Structural Violence of Climate Change
Document Type
Article
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.22459/HER.22.02.2016
Journal Title
Human Ecology Review
Publication Date
7-2016
Abstract
There is a high-profile body of work asserting a link between anthropogenic climate change and increased rates of violence. There is also an expanding literature that is highly skeptical of this research. Critics point out that (1) this research has so far produced widely divergent findings, and that there is no consensus on a causal link between climate and the incidence of conflict. Critics also argue that much climate violence research (2) draws upon a longdiscredited environmental determinism, (3) rehashes colonial stereotypes of the global South, (4) naturalizes and depoliticizes inequalities within and between nations, and (5) potentially creates new rationales for militarism and intervention from more powerful states. In the following essay, I build on these critiques, arguing that orthodox climate conflict research also focuses unduly on the potential climate-related violence of the poor, overlooking the violence of the powerful. Drawing from a climate justice perspective, I advocate for more study on the structural violence of climate change. To make this case, I focus on the world’s largest publicly traded fossil fuel companies.
Publisher Statement
Human Ecology Review is the official journal of the Society for Human Ecology and is published in open access online format by ANU Press.
Recommended Citation
Bonds, E. (2016). Upending climate violence research: Fossil fuel corporations and the structural violence of climate change. Human Ecology Review, 22(2), 3–23. https://doi.org/10.22459/HER.22.02.2016