Below you'll find transcripts of some interesting interviews and conversations I've had over the last few years. You'll also find some replies to critics of my research.
A comment on Alex de Waal's analysis of the causal relationship between climate change and violence in the Darfur region of the Sudan, with responses from Alex de Wall and others,
can be found here. (Alex de Waal is the Director of HIV/AIDS and Social Transformation; Emergencies and Humanitarian Action Programs at the Social Science Research Council in New York.)
Jon Faine and Jill Singer interviewed Thomas Homer-Dixon for The Conversation Hour on Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) Melbourne. To listen to the interview,
click here.
Fareed Zakaria interviewed Thomas Homer-Dixon about his book
The Upside of Down on the PBS show Foreign Exchange. To see the video,
click here.
Terrence McNally interviewed Thomas Homer-Dixon about his book
The Upside of Down for Pacifica Radio in Los Angeles. For the transcript of "Is the Deadly Crash of Our Civilization Inevitable" as it appears on AlterNet,
click here.
Conversation with the Rt. Honourable Paul Martin about the Internet and the revitalization of democracy.
Interview conducted by Ted Rutland of the webzine Uncommon Good on the subject of The Ingenuity Gap.
Homer-Dixon, Thomas, "
Beyond Management: How and Why Kymlicka is Wrong," response to Kymlicka, Will, "
Panarchy and Dystopia," review of
The Upside of Down,
Toronto Globe and Mail, November 11, 2006.
Homer-Dixon, Thomas; Peluso, Nancy, and Watts, Michael, "Exchange on Violent Environments," in Environmental Change & Security Project Report, Issue 9 (Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center, 2003): 89-96. 
Schwartz, Daniel; Deligiannis, Tom; and Homer-Dixon, Thomas, "The Environment and Violent Conflict: A Response to Gleditsch's Critique and Suggestions for Future Research," Environmental Change & Security Project Report, Issue 6 (Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center, Summer 2000), pp. 77-93. 
Homer-Dixon, Thomas and Levy, Marc, "Correspondence," International Security 20, No. 3 (Winter 1995/96): 189-98. 