Abstract

In recent years, most Western governments have integrated climate change into their national security agendas. 1 These topics have also become of key interest on an international level, as can be seen in the envisaged new NATO general strategy 2 and the 2007 climate change debate in the UN Security Council.3 In June 2009, the UN General Assembly passed a resolution asking “the relevant organs of the United Nations …, to intensify their efforts in considering and addressing climate change, including its possible security implications”, and requesting that the Secretary-General submit a comprehensive report to the next General Assembly on “the possible security implications of climate change”.

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