03 March 2011 - While Europe tries to ensure undistorted access to raw materials for its industries, commercial conflicts over export restrictions are a growing area of tension in international trade, with developing countries defending their right to curtail global access to their resources in s
Foresight: Migration and Global Environmental Change. Final Project Report. London: The Government Office for Science.
World Risk Report 2011. Berlin und Bonn: Bündnis Entwicklung Hilft (Alliance Development Works) and United Nations University.
Food security, farming, and climate change to 2050. Scenarios, Results, Policy Options. Washington, D.C.: IFPRI.
The Waters of the Third Pole: Sources of Threat, Sources of Survival. London: Hazard Research Centre, UCL; the Humanitarian Futures Programme at King's College London, and ChinaDialogue.
The European Union is not the alone in exploring the means to address potential security implications of climate change. EU and Member States representatives met recently in Berlin, at a briefing session regarding this topic.
Haiti: Saving the Environment, Preventing Instability and Conflict. Latin America and Caribbean Policy Briefing No. 20. Brüssel.
Food, Energy, Water and the Climate: A Perfect Storm of Global Events? London: Government Office for Science.
Institutional conditions for IWRM: The Israeli case. Ground Water, Vol. 46, No. 1, pp.91–102.
Investing in Stability: Conflict Risk, Environmental Challenges and the Bottom-Line: IISD and UNEP FI.