1st Edition

Development and Security in Southeast Asia Volume I: The Environment

    262 Pages
    by Routledge

    262 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title was first published in 2003. This three-volume set examines the relationship between government and civil society in their efforts to define and pursue security. Including the results of an extensive research program, each volume is organized around one of the three principal themes - environment, people and globalization, supplying compelling evidence of the tension between economic change and human well-being. Challenging the conventional wisdom about the beneficial results of economically induced change, this first volume suggests that too often the mismanagement of development jeopardizes the security of individuals, families, communities, and possibly the state, by harming the very environment which is required to sustain both people and their economic existence. Bringing together an international group of scholars from a variety of disciplines, this volume is particularly relevant for academic and general research communities in the areas of social, economic, political and security matters of Southeast Asia.

    Introduction: Defining the problem and managing the uncertainty, David B. Dewitt and Carolina G. Hernandez; Environment, development and security in Southeast Asia: exploring the linkages, Jennifer Clapp and Peter Dauvergne. Case Studies: Hazardous waste and human security in Southeast Asia: local - global linkages and responses, Jennifer Clapp; Communities in turmoil: comparing state responses to environmental insecurity in Southeast Asian forests, Peter Dauvergne; Development and (in)security: the perspective of a Philippine community, Pia C. Bennagen; Human and ecological security: the anatomy of mining disputes in the Philippines, Francisco Magno; Food production and environmental security in Indonesia, Mary Young; The new age of insecurity: state capacity and industrial pollution in the Philippines, Eliseo M. Cubol; The textile industry in Indonesia, Wiku Adisasmito; Environment and security: mitigating climate change while strengthening security, Agus P. Sari; Bibliography; Index.
    'The complex relationship between security and development is rising to the top of the international agenda. September 11th and the Bali bombings have added an emotional new dimension to issues that have been significant in Southeast Asia for more than a generation. Written mainly by younger scholars from Canada and Southeast Asia in the shadow of the economic crisis of 1997, the innovative essays in these three volumes focus on the triangular connections among human security, governance, and development. Focusing primarily on Indonesia and the Philippines, they pay special attention to the environment and resources, migration and employment and the forces of globalization that have transformed the peoples and governments of the region. What is original is their conceptual interest in the interplay of states and localities in defining both security and development. The case studies, several of which reflect the views of local activists, researchers and politicians, underscore that national security and human security, like markets and societies, can be mutually reinforcing but can also collide with violent consequences. Put together during a three-year collaboration, their analysis and prescriptions make a valuable contribution to academic and policy debates that extend into the developing world well beyond Southeast Asia.' Paul Evans, University of British Columbia, Canada 'The three-volume book...has a remarkable coherence...As a whole the book is successful in illustrating the many facets of development - or security - in two countries. Hopefully its policy recommendations will circulate outside the academic arena and reach the policy-makers to whom they are addressed.' Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia and Oceania 'A significant contriubtion to the literature, the volume adds knowledge through careful on-the-ground research into the key linkages connecting environment, development and security.' Environmental Change a