
Among scholars who focus on the politics of natural resources, conventional wisdom asserts that resource-scarce states have the strongest interest in securing control over resources. Counterintuitively, however, in Perils of Plenty, Jonathan N. Markowitz finds that the opposite is true. In actuality, what states make influences what they want to take. Specifically, Markowitz argues that the more economically dependent states are on resource extraction rents for income, the stronger their preferences will be to secure control over resources. He tests the theory with a set of case studies that analyze how states reacted to the 2007 exogenous climate shock that exposed energy resources in the Arctic. Given the dangerous potential for conflict escalation in the Middle East and the South China Sea and the continued shrinkage of the polar ice cap, this book speaks to a genuinely important development in world politics that will have implications for understanding the political effects of climate change for many years to come.
This book investigates the counterintuitive relationship between a state's economic dependence on resource extraction and its propensity to engage in conflict over resource control. Jonathan N. Markowitz, a scholar of international relations, challenges the conventional wisdom that resource-scarce states are the most aggressive. Instead, he posits that states heavily reliant on resource extraction rents are more likely to pursue aggressive policies to secure control over new resource frontiers, testing this framework against the geopolitical shifts triggered by the 2007 Arctic climate shock.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in international relations and security studies identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of resource politics and climate-induced conflict. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the prose and the clarity with which the author applies his theoretical model to real-world geopolitical tensions.
Page Count:
314
Publication Date:
2020-04-30
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190078243
ISBN-13:
9780190078249
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