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Jeannie Sowers addressing the audience
Political scientist Jeannie Sowers conducted an engaging lecture titled “Environment and Human Insecurity in the Middle East,” at Georgetown University in Qatar (GU-Q).
Speaking to an audience of students, faculty, and community members, the visiting scholar said, “I thought we could think about notions in environmental politics, issues we don’t think of as being immediately apparent as causes of human insecurity, which is a lack of well-being and health.” She was explaining how an ubiquitous water bottle leaves an ecological shadow, which she describes as the environmental harm from the production, consumption, and disposal of a resource that is displaced to other people, places, countries, or even
future generations.
Dr Mehran Kamrava, director of the Centre for International and Regional Studies (CIRS) at GU-Q, said: “The topic of human security continues to climb in importance as both environmental disasters and social and political instability continue to stress our resources.”
Sowers, who is an associate professor of political science at the University of New Hampshire, drew direct and indirect connections between human well-being and environmental challenges facing the Middle East in particular.
Drawing on the current “#YouStink” campaign, a popular uprising in Beirut that accuses the Lebanese state for mishandling trash collection, she explained that the issue, which was the result of the closure of a landfill outside the city, is really the result of the common practice of
“distancing” a problem.
“Industrial and industrialising nations often defer negative ecological costs upon those who are most vulnerable to ecological shifts, including those weakest on the political scale, such as poor communities and other species,” she said, noting that even developed countries deal with these issues.
“You can apply an ecological shadow to any product or activity, then we can begin to ask how to reduce intensity of that shadow. So how do we reduce ecological shadows? ” asked Sowers in her conclusion. She argued that you have to have cities, states, firms, and consumers all working together to solve environmental problems. Solutions, she argued, must include the provision of urban infrastructures for water and sanitation in particular, to begin dealing with the growing strain on the environment.
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