Security of energy supply is a major concern for all modern societies, intensified by skyrocketing demand in India and China and increasing international competition over fossil fuel deposits, Energy Security: An Interdisciplinary Approach gives a comparative analysis from both consumers’ and producers’ perspectives. It uniquely combines economics, geology, international relations, business, history, public management and political science in one comprehensive volume, highlighting the vulnerabilities and need to move to more sustainable energy sources.
The author provides a number of useful case studies to demonstrate the theory, including perspectives from consuming regions such as the United States, the European Union, and China, and from exporting regions; the Middle East, Africa, Russia and the Caspian Sea.
Key features include:
- Coverage on theoretical and empirical frameworks so that readers are able to analyse concepts relevant to new laws and policies in energy security
- Up-to-date coverage on ‘green energy’, outlining research on the balance between meeting energy needs and avoiding environmental pollution
- An examination of the three most prominent international energy organizations; International Energy Agency, International Energy Forum, and Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
- A full Glossary listing all the important terms used in the energy field
This study holds important information for policymakers, politicians, energy specialists, scientists and post-graduate and final year students of energy and international relations. With its clear written style, it will also appeal to professionals interested in international political economy and the future of global energy.
From the Back Cover
Security of energy supply is a major concern for all modern societies, intensified by skyrocketing demand in India and China and increasing international competition over fossil fuel deposits, Energy Security: An Interdisciplinary Approach gives a comparative analysis from both consumers’ and producers’ perspectives. It uniquely combines economics, geology, international relations, business, history, public management and political science in one comprehensive volume, highlighting the vulnerabilities and need to move to more sustainable energy sources.
The author provides a number of useful case studies to demonstrate the theory, including perspectives from consuming regions such as the United States, the European Union, and China, and from exporting regions; the Middle East, Africa, Russia and the Caspian Sea.
Key features include:
- Coverage on theoretical and empirical frameworks so that readers are able to analyse concepts relevant to new laws and policies in energy security
- Up-to-date coverage on ‘green energy’, outlining research on the balance between meeting energy needs and avoiding environmental pollution
- An examination of the three most prominent international energy organizations; International Energy Agency, International Energy Forum, and Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
- A full Glossary listing all the important terms used in the energy field
This study holds important information for policymakers, politicians, energy specialists, scientists and post-graduate and final year students of energy and international relations. With its clear written style, it will also appeal to professionals interested in international political economy and the future of global energy.
About the Author
Professor Gawdat Bahgat, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, USA
Professor Bahgat has been working on energy issues for the last fifteen years. He is currently Professor of Political Science and Director of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Indiana University of Pennsylania. In 2006 he served as a consultant to the United States government on counter-terrorism. Professor Bahgat has published six books, with a seventh to follow in 2010, and has written more than 140 articles for scholarly jounals. His work has been translated into several languages and has been used as required reading in a number of universities in the United States, Europe and Japan. His main areas of expertise include energy security, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and terrorism.