Impact of Extreme Weather Events in the Wartime Okinawa
この論文をさがす
説明
Global publics have been noticing the intensity of droughts, wildfires, melting poles, rising sea levels, and typhoons in their daily lives. Policy communities are scrutinizing the nature of the climate change, its human-induced causes and environmental effects. But the effect of climate change does not end with an account of environmental impacts. Climate change has had social and security effects too, as recent arguments on migration pressures (Dalby), resource scarcity (Homer-Dixon), access to rural land (Baechler), and intensification of conflicts (Kelley) emphasize. This article looks back in time and argues that extreme climate and weather phenomena have influenced conflicts not only in recent decades, but relate to the past occurrences too, including the WWII. As narratives of past events tend towards anthropocentric explanations, the presence of weather and climate are often minimalized or bracketed out in favour of intentionality and human agency. Yet wars are complex phenomena, and no human agency can fully account for them. The argument here is that extreme weather events, such as heavy rains, had contributed significantly to the transformation of the battlefield in Okinawa, and to the atrocities committed on the local noncombatant population. It provides a more climate-prone explanation for the final stages of the Pacific War.
収録刊行物
-
- 多文化社会研究
-
多文化社会研究 9 85-101, 2023-03-23
長崎大学多文化社会学部
- Tweet
詳細情報 詳細情報について
-
- CRID
- 1050577154755634560
-
- NII書誌ID
- AA12713084
-
- ISSN
- 21891486
-
- HANDLE
- 10069/00042166
-
- NDL書誌ID
- 032789966
-
- 本文言語コード
- en
-
- 資料種別
- departmental bulletin paper
-
- データソース種別
-
- IRDB
- NDLサーチ