What is it about?

The purpose of the article is to compare ministerial discourses in terms of constructing the concept of environmental security and the significance of the environment itself in the situation of the ongoing war in Ukraine. Using speech act securitization analysis, statements issued by state offices from selected Central European countries were examined. The article analyzes ministerial statements published on the websites of six Ministries of the Environment: Ukrainian, Polish, Slovak, Hungarian, Romanian and Moldavian. The research covers the first five weeks of the war. Three types of entities have been considered in the analysis of archival materials: (1) those whose environmental security is at risk, (2) those that pose a threat, and (3) those that can restore this security. The analysis makes it possible to distinguish general types of entities, and thus to describe the similarities and differences between individual discourses, and present how the environment itself was perceived and how the construct of environmental safety was created in the context of other types of security. https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/SBNDDJAK8EJTHJ5PHEMQ/full?target=10.1080/01442872.2024.2361696

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Why is it important?

The most important thing in the article is answer to four research questions: What importance is attributed to the environment in Central European ministerial statements? How do they build the construct of the environmental safety? Two further questions are related to these issues: Is environmental security more important than other types of security, such as physical, energy, food, economic and health security? And is the environment presented and treated in a more reductionist or holistic manner?

Perspectives

The results of the conducted analyses also allow for a better understanding of the particular type of connections between environmental issues and various dimensions of state and societal functioning during wartime. Addressing the issue is the first step towards changing the way of thinking and attempting to reform Central European state institutions that deal with the environment. The desired goal of these changes is to adopt a strategy that allows for a more effective protection of nature not only during peacetime but above all during armed conflict.

PhD Karolina Cynk

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This page is a summary of: The war in Ukraine and environmental security in Central European ministerial discourse, Policy Studies, June 2024, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/01442872.2024.2361696.
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