From Seeds to Suffering: Herbicides, Environmental Degradation and Slow Violence

Authors

  • Alexandra Pacheco Hardwicke University of Calgary, Centre for Military, Security & Strategic Studies

Abstract

Warfare almost always results in the destruction of the environment, yet the devastation extends far beyond the immediate physical consequences of battle. Historically, natural environments have played an integral role in human conflict, from land disputes to armed conflict and terrorism. Starving the enemy through attacking livestock, contaminating water resources, and scorched earth tactics are a few of the many ways in which the environment has been weaponized during war. Environmental security, particularly in the context of armed conflict, is an evolving field. The incorporation of slow violence may provide a critical framework to analyze post-war impacts and long-term ecological harm in ways traditional security studies tends to overlook.

Key Words: Environmental Security, slow violence, post-war landscapes

Author Biography

  • Alexandra Pacheco Hardwicke, University of Calgary, Centre for Military, Security & Strategic Studies

    Alexandra Pacheco Hardwicke is a Master of Strategic Studies candidate at the Centre of Military, Security and Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary. Her primary academic interests include, environmental warfare, chemical weapons, climate justice, and the nexus between climate change and terrorism.

    Awarded second place in the Journal of Military and Strategic Studies 2025 National Award of Excellence.

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Published

2026-03-16