Abstract
It is noted that the number of more or less permanently displaced persons throughout the world (now of the order of 1 % of the total human population) continues to increase at a rate of approximately 3 million per year; the situation in Africa is especially grave, with the number of displaced persons there (now of the order of 3 % of the African population), continuing to increase at a rate of approximately 1.5 million per year. Human displacement—which can be seen to originate largely in rural areas—results primarily from one or more of three factors, namely escape from persecution, escape from military activities, or escape from inadequate means of subsistence. A number of examples from Africa are provided of the social and political consequences of human displacement, with emphasis on conflict situations at the sites of relocation. It is further noted that the numbers of displaced persons continue to grow relentlessly despite there being no discernible rise in persecution or in military activities, and despite the long-sustained ameliorative efforts and financial assistance by intergovernmental agencies and others. It is accordingly suggested that the major cause of the continuing increase in the numbers of displaced persons is an ever-growing imbalance between population numbers and the human carrying capacity of the land. Population increases lead to smaller per caput natural resource bases, a predicament exacerbated by over-use—and thus degradation—of the land and its natural resources. In the arid and semi-arid regions of Africa, over-use of the land most often takes the form of overgrazing, leading to land degradation that is severe enough to be referred to as desertification. It is concluded that to achieve sustainable utilization of the land and its natural resources will necessitate the integrated attainment of environmental security and societal security—the latter inter alia requiring participatory governance, non-violent means of conflict resolution, and especially population controls.
This Chapter is reproduced from the author’s Entry #347 provided in Chap. 2, with the original title, ‘Globalization vis-à-vis environmental security’. It is used here by permission of the International Society of Naturalists, the copyright holder, as given on 15 March 2013. It had been an invited working paper, for ‘The International Colloquium on Coming to Terms with Globalization: Possible Actions and Options for the Body Politic’ of the Evangelische Akademie Loccum, Rehburg-Loccum, Germany, 10–12 December 1999. He is pleased to acknowledge suggestions from Carol E. Westing.
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The 1998 Statute of the International Criminal Court came into force in 1999 (UNTS 38544).
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Westing, A.H. (2013). The Question of Globalization. In: From Environmental to Comprehensive Security. SpringerBriefs on Pioneers in Science and Practice(), vol 13. Springer, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-00687-1_8
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