Jennifer Clapp

Political Economy of Food, Agriculture and Environment

Global Environmental Politics amid Geopolitical Turbulence


Journal article


Yixian Sun, Jennifer Clapp, Liliana B. Andonova, Peter Dauvergne, Dhanasree Jayaram, Kennedy Mbeva, Matthew Paterson, Trissia Wijaya, Fengshi Wu
Global Environmental Politics, 2026

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Sun, Y., Clapp, J., Andonova, L. B., Dauvergne, P., Jayaram, D., Mbeva, K., … Wu, F. (2026). Global Environmental Politics amid Geopolitical Turbulence. Global Environmental Politics.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Sun, Yixian, Jennifer Clapp, Liliana B. Andonova, Peter Dauvergne, Dhanasree Jayaram, Kennedy Mbeva, Matthew Paterson, Trissia Wijaya, and Fengshi Wu. “Global Environmental Politics amid Geopolitical Turbulence.” Global Environmental Politics (2026).


MLA   Click to copy
Sun, Yixian, et al. “Global Environmental Politics amid Geopolitical Turbulence.” Global Environmental Politics, 2026.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{yixian2026a,
  title = {Global Environmental Politics amid Geopolitical Turbulence},
  year = {2026},
  journal = {Global Environmental Politics},
  author = {Sun, Yixian and Clapp, Jennifer and Andonova, Liliana B. and Dauvergne, Peter and Jayaram, Dhanasree and Mbeva, Kennedy and Paterson, Matthew and Wijaya, Trissia and Wu, Fengshi}
}

Abstract

Over the past decade, three overlapping trends have fundamentally reshaped and now characterize the global geopolitical order: the rise of emerging powers, increasing military con icts, and growing international trade tensions. These features of the global order are deeply connected to global environmental politics (GEP) and governance, as a warming world spurs some aspects of geopolitical change, while the geopolitical dynamics them- selves have far-reaching environmental consequences. Given this, we call on GEP researchers to bring geopolitics more fully back into their analyses to better explain the new dynamics of environmental politics and governance in a changing world. We identify four priority areas for future inquiry for GEP scholarship: the race for critical minerals, ecological dimensions of land conquests, the trade–environment nexus in the context of trade tensions and blocs, and the interplay of the rise of authoritarian populism and political polarization and global environmental change.