Index

New Frontiers in Conflict Management and Peace Economics: With a Focus on Human Security

ISBN: 978-1-83982-427-2, eISBN: 978-1-83982-426-5

ISSN: 1572-8323

Publication date: 15 February 2021

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2021), "Index", Chatterji, M. and Gangopadhyay, P. (Ed.) New Frontiers in Conflict Management and Peace Economics: With a Focus on Human Security (Contributions to Conflict Management, Peace Economics and Development, Vol. 29), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 157-162. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1572-832320210000029011

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021 Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Index

Note: Page numbers followed by “n” indicate notes.

Abrogation of Article 370 and 35A, 117–118

Accessibility indicators, 62

Adaptive process for smart community governance, 31–32

Additive 3D printing technologies, 6

Aggregate future generations value, 139

Aircrafts, 3

Analytical independence, 128

Antarctica Treaty (1959), 23

Anti-access-area-denial capabilities (A2/AD capabilities), 6

Armament costing, 6

Artificial intelligence (AI), 2, 6

Augustine goods, 7–8

Augustine products, 12

Augustine weapons systems, 7–13

Augustine’s Law, 2

cost, technology, and capability, 3–5

RMA, 6–7

Autonomous system, 6

Autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL), 105, 108–109, 111

Baltagi–Song–Koh test, 70–71

Banking regulation, 45, 49–50

Battlestar Galactica, 3, 12

BBB (see Build Back Better (B3))

BBVA Bank Foundation, 64

Biculturalism, 90

Bipartisan nature of support, 125–126

BJP Manifesto (2014), 119–120

Board structures, 150

‘Brain Waste’, 95

Brexit, 2, 94

Build Back Better (B3), 30, 32

Build back better even before disaster (B4), 28–29, 37n2

Eastern Japan Earthquake Disaster, 30

Great Hanshin Earthquake Disaster, 29–30

PDS as extended notion of series of disasters, 30–31

problems, 37

Business

market fundamentalism and mainstream business organisations, 134–136

nature, society and future generations, 136–140

and peace, 140

transforming, 140

C-intereg database project, 65

Capability, 137

Capacity of government, 104

Capital mobility, 105

Capital stock, 65

Carbon-intensive financing, 43–49

Catalan, 59–60

Catalonian linguistic normalization, 59

Catastrophic risk, 135

Central banks, 46–49

Climate change, 40–42, 46, 51

and conflict, 82–83

Climate risk indices (CRI), 42–43

Climate risks, 41, 49

assessment, 42–43

Climate-related financial risks, 41, 49

assessment, 50–51

green financing and carbon-intensive financing, 43–49

input and output price risks, 51–52

physical risk, 52

policy risk, 51

risk assessment of bank borrowers, 52–53

Climate-related risks, 41, 46

Coalition, 18

Cold War, 129

Commitment strategy, 117

Communicative process, 29

adaptive process for smart community governance, 31–32

B4, 29–31

Merapi Volcano Region, 32–37

Community-based governance, 29

Compensation hypothesis, 104–105

Conflict, 80

conflict–migration nexus, 80–81

in host country, 87

intra-familial conflict, 89

intra-personal conflict, 89–90

migrant–host country conflict, 87–89

mitigation, 90

Cooperative coalition, 20–22

Corporate governance, 147–149

Cultural threats, 91

Cyberwar, 2

Decision-makers, 134–135

‘Declaration of peace to the world’, 3–4

Defence budget, 2

Demographic threats, 91

Departure point, 66

Destruction of nature and ecosystems, 134

Diasporas, 84, 98n7

‘Direct Finance’, 44

‘Disaster Clock’, 28

Disaster Management Cycle, 28

Discounting, 135

Diseconomies of scope, 9–10

Drones, 6

Eastern Japan Earthquake Disaster, 28, 30

Ecological value function, 136

Econometric techniques, 62–63

Economic

arrangement, 136–137

globalisation, 1

integration, 104

threats, 91

Efficiency hypothesis, 104

Emigration, 84–87

emigration-related conflicts, 90

Energy, 52

conflict in, 143–145

data analysis, 150–154

European context, 147–149

literature review, 145–146

objective, 149–150

sector, 142–143

Environmental and climate change Screening (ECC Screening), 44

Environmental risks, 41

Equal weighted index, 153–154

Error correction model (ECM), 109

European context, 147–149

European Union (EU), 2, 40, 143

Exogenous shocks, 21

Exported capital, 63–66

Extractive industry, 144

F-statistic, 108

F-test, 70

Financial

policies, 46–48

risks, 50

stability, 41, 46

First Use (FU), 117

Fiscal balances, 72–74

Forced migration, 80, 82

Foreign Minister (FM), 116

Fourth Industrial Revolution, 12

Free-market liberal democracy, 1

Future generations

indicators, 138

value function, 139

‘Gain’, 24n10

Gender, 142–143

bias, 143

conflict, 143

equality, 142

Generalised transport cost (GTC), 65

Geographic information systems (GIS), 62–63

Global business, 134

Global health, 129

dominant models in academic discourse, 128–130

Global migration, 80

Globalisation, 104–105

empirical results, 109–112

literature review, 105–107

methodology and data, 107–109

Governmental agencies (GA), 150

Great Hanshin Earthquake Disaster, 29–30

Green finance/financing, 43–49

initiatives, 45–46

Green house gas emissions (GHG emissions), 40–41, 51

Gross Domestic Product (GDP), 68, 108

Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake, 30

Hausman test, 70–71

Health histories perspective, 130

Human history

critical juncture of, 2

crossroads, 3

Human insecurity, 2

Human security, 2, 4, 104, 107

strategies, 4

Hyogo Framework for Action, 28

Immigrants, 84–85

Immigration, 84–87 (see also Migration)

Imported capital, 63–66

stock, 70

Imran Khan’s nuclear threat, 119

Indian defence strategy, 115

Inflation rate (Inf), 112

Input price risks, 51–52

Insurance, 41

industry, 49

Integrity, 136

Inter-generation justice, 139–140

Inter-species justice, 138, 140

Interethnic expectations, 90

Intermediate Nuclear Force Agreement, 15

Internal capital, 63–66

Internal migration, 98n6

Internal road network capital stock, 63

International Finance Corporation (IFC), 147

International migration, 84–87

International Organisation for Migration (IOM), 82, 84

Intra-familial conflict, 89

Intra-personal conflict, 89–90

Involuntary migrants, 86

Involuntary migration, 82

Jammu & Kashmir (J&K), 117–118

Job security, 107

Kemiren community, 35

Kepuharjo community, 35

KOF de facto index (KOFGIdf), 109

KOF de jure index (KOFGIdj), 109

KOF general index (KOFGI), 109

Konjunkturforschungsstelle (KOF), 108–109

Konjunkturforschungsstelle globalisation index (KOFGI), 108, 110

Labour productivity, 61, 68

Lagrange multipliers (LM), 70

Large-scale asset purchases, 55n5

Liability risk, 51

Linear model of cointegration, 109

Loan defaults, 53

London Naval Conference, 22

Long-run average unit cost (LRAUC), 8, 10–11

‘Low carbon financing/investment’, 47

Low-carbon policies, 53

Macroprudential policy, 48–49

Marginal cost (MC), 5

Market fundamentalism, 134–136

Merapi Volcano Region, 32

B3, 33–35

eruptive history, 32–33

outcomes of YSM-based collaborative action development, 35–36

post script, 36–37

Migrant–host country conflict, 87–89

Migration, 80, 97n1

addressing perceived security risks, 91–94

integrating immigrants, 94–96

migration-related conflict, 90

mitigating, 90

three-step model, 80

Migration Policy Institute (MPI), 81

Military robotics, 6

Military technology, 4

Minimum efficient scale of production (MES), 9

Modernisation of health, science and technology, 128

Monterey policies, 46–48

Moran’s I test, 70

Multilateral arms race, 16

Neo-protectionism, 1

Network analysis, 62–63

Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS), 45

New international alliances, 128

New Start Treaty, 16

No First Use (NFU), 116, 118–119

and attitude of other NWs, 122

Non-bank financial institutions, 41

Non-Proliferation Treaty (1968), 19, 23

Nuclear doctrine, 116–117

Nuclear weapons (NWs), 115–116

abrogation of Article 370 and 35A, 117–118

bipartisan nature of support, 121–122

BJP Manifesto (2014), 119–120

Imran Khan’s nuclear threat, 119

NFU, 118–119

NFU and attitude of other NWs, 122

nuclear doctrine, 116–117

review, 120–121

Nuclear Weapons State (NWS), 116

Output price risks, 51–52

Overflow effect, 62

Panel model, 108

Paris Agreement, 40, 46, 50

Partial Test Ban Treaty (1963), 19

Payoffs to original members, 20–22

Perpetual peace, 1

Persistent Disruptive Stressors (PDS), 29, 33

community pressed under, 31

as extended notion of series of disasters, 30–31

Physical risk, 51–52

Physical threats, 91

Planned average total cost curve (ATC planned curve), 4–5

Policy risk, 51

Political

conflict, 81–83

threats, 91

Pollution, 41

Post-war

agencies, 128

policies of internationalism and consensus, 128

Pre-disaster reduction planning (PDRP), 37n2

Predatory globalisation, 2–3

Present generations, 139–140

Prime Minister (PM), 115

Prisoner’s dilemma game, 17–19, 21, 23

Private capital, 66

Process-specific technological change, 10

Product-related technological change, 8

Production functions, 61

spillover effects modelling by means of, 66–68

Production inputs, 61

Productive private capital, 68

Profit drive, 134

Prospect theory, 134

Public capital stock, 68

Public employment in India, 104, 107–108

Rainforest Action Network (RAN), 43

Recovery, Rehabilitation, and Reconstruction (RRR), 32

‘Recovery-focused’ approach, 28

Regional balance of payments, 76

Regional fiscal conflicts, 60

Rest of public capital, 66

Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA), 2, 6–7, 13

Risk assessment of bank borrowers, 52–53

Sargan and Hansen-J statistic, 70

Schofield’s model, 22–23

Seabed Treaty (1971), 23

Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction, 28, 31

Sindumarutani community, 35

SMART Governance, 29

Smart weapons systems, 6

Social conflict, 81–83

Social implementation, 37

Social stability, 104

Social value function, 137

Soil erosion, 41

South East Asian Central Banks (SEACEN), 47–48

Spanish economy, 59

Spanish territory, 65

Spatial autocorrelation with auto-regressive disturbances model (SAC model), 70

Spatial panel data, 61, 66

State-owned enterprises (SOEs), 148

Super powers, 116

Supervisory authorities, 46–49

Supranational organisation, 19–20

Survival, 80

Sustainability indicators, 136

Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), 44

SWOT analysis, 34

Syrian refugees, 96

Tactical Nuclear Weapons (TNWs), 120

Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), 45

Technological change, 8

Termination of multilateral arms race, 15–16

Territorial

conflicts in Spain, 58–61

proximity, 69

Terrorism, 92

Three-player arms race, 17

Three-Power Naval Conference, 22

Tournament armour, 12

Transition risk, 51

Transport infrastructure spillovers, 61

data and empirical results, 68–74

effects, 61–63

imported, exported, internal, and used capital, 63–66

production function, 66–68

territorial conflicts in Spain, 58–61

Trilateral arms, 16

race game, 16–23

Turkish Ministry of Health, 96

UK aircraft industry, 7

UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (UN-IPCC), 40

UN organisations, 128

Unit costs of economic distance, 65

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC), 40

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), 81–82, 86–87

Urban population (UrPop), 112

US naval forces, 1–2

Used capital, 63–66

Value functions, 136

Victims, 87

Violence, 134

Voluntary migrants, 85

Voluntary migration, 80

War-related conflict, 81–82

Washington Naval Conference (1921), 22

Washington Naval Treaty (1922), 23

Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD), 116

Weights, 137

Well-being, 137

WHO, 129–130

Women representation, 142

World Resources Institute (WRI), 83

World Trade Organisation, 2

Xenophobia, 93

Yonmenkaigi chart, 34–35

Yonmenkaigi System Method (YSM), 29, 32–35

outcomes of YSM-based collaborative action development, 35–36

‘Zero-to-One Movement’, 32