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Articles

Climate change, neoauthoritarianism, necropolitics, and state failure: the Duterte regime in the Philippines

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Pages 145-167 | Received 23 Oct 2020, Accepted 27 Oct 2021, Published online: 24 Feb 2022
 

ABSTRACT

The Philippines is vulnerable to climate change and the natural hazards it has enhanced. The Philippines lacks peace, suffers from weak state institutions, and is a fragile state. Since 2016 President Rodrigo Duterte has embarked upon a war on drugs, claiming thousands of lives. This war on drugs is perceived to be a pretext for the establishment of an authoritarian government. The confluence of weak state institutions, a disregard for human rights, and weak public participation in environmental governance generates difficulty for coping with climate change in the Philippines. The intersection of climate change and state weakness is found in the violation of the human rights of environmentalists and the Philippines is among the leading countries in the world in terms of the number of environmentalists killed.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors .

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