References
- Aguiton, S. (2019). Fragile transfers: Index insurance and the global circuits of climate risks in Senegal. Nature and Culture, 14(3), 282–298.
- Baker, T. (1996). On the genealogy of moral hazard. Texas Law Review, 75(2), 237–292.
- Baskin, J. S. (2015, September 10). While politicians debate, Munich Re innovates. Forbes Magazine.
- Beck, U. (1992 [1986]). Risk society: Towards a new modernity. Sage.
- Beck, U. (2002). The terrorist threat: World risk society revisited. Theory, Culture & Society, 19(4), 39–55.
- Beck, U. (2009). World at risk. Polity.
- Bruce, J. P., Hoesung, L. & Haites, E. F. (Eds.). (1995). Climate change 1995: Economic and social dimensions of climate change. Cambridge University Press.
- Bougen, P. (2003). Catastrophe risk. Economy and Society, 32(2), 253–274.
- Butler, B. (2020, January 14). Suncorp and IAG temporarily stop selling insurance in fire-affected areas of Victoria and NSW. The Guardian.
- Çalişkan, K. & Callon, M. (2009). Economization, part 1: Shifting attention from the economy towards processes of economization. Economy and Society, 38(3), 369–398.
- Çalişkan, K. & Callon, M. (2010). Economization, part 2: A research programme for the study of markets. Economy and Society, 39(1), 1–32.
- Carrington, D. (2017, November 14). Global insurance plan aims to defuse potential climate damage ‘bombshell’. The Guardian.
- Ceres. (2012). Insurer climate risk disclosure survey. Retrieved from ceres.org
- Christophers, B., Bigger, P. & Johnson, L. (2020). Stretching scales? Risk and sociality in climate finance. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 52(1), 88–110.
- Collier, S. J. (2008). Enacting catastrophe: Preparedness, insurance, budgetary rationalization. Economy and Society, 37(2), 224–250.
- Collier, S. J. (2014). Neoliberalism and natural disaster: Insurance as political technology of catastrophe. Journal of Cultural Economy, 7(3), 273–290.
- Elliott, R. (2021). Underwater: Loss, flood insurance, and the moral economy of climate change in the United States. Columbia University Press.
- Ericson, R. & Doyle, A. (2004a). Catastrophe risk, insurance, and terrorism. Economy and Society, 33(2), 135–173.
- Ericson, R. & Doyle, A. (2004b). Uncertain business: Risk, insurance and the limits of knowledge. University of Toronto Press.
- Ericson, R. V. & Doyle, A. (2003). Risk and morality. University of Toronto Press.
- Ewald, F. (1991). Insurance and risk. In G. Burchell, C. Gordon & P. Miller (Eds.), The Foucault effect: Studies in governmentality (pp. 197–210). University of Chicago Press.
- Ewald, F. (2019). The values of insurance. Grey Room, 74, 120–145.
- Gallin, L. (2018, November 16). UN partners with 16 global re/insurers to develop climate risk assessment tools. Reinsurance News.
- Haueter, N. V. & Jones, G. (2016). Managing risk in reinsurance: From city fires to global warming. Oxford University Press.
- Heimer, C. (2003). Insurers as moral actors. In R. V. Ericson & A. Doyle (Eds.), Risk and morality (pp. 284–316). University of Toronto Press.
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). (1990). Climate change: The IPCC scientific assessment. Cambridge University Press.
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). (1995). Second assessment: Climate change. Cambridge University Press.
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). (2018). Global warming of 1.5° celsius. Cambridge University Press.
- James, H., Borscheid, P., Gugerli, D. & Strauman, T. (2013). The value of risk: Swiss Re and the history of reinsurance. Oxford University Press.
- Jarzabkowski, P., Bednarek, R. & Spee, P. (2015). Making a market for acts of God. Oxford University Press.
- Johnson, L. (2013a). Catastrophe bonds and financial risk: Securing capital and rule through contingency. Geoforum; Journal of Physical, Human, and Regional Geosciences, 45, 30–40.
- Johnson, L. (2013b). Index insurance and the articulation of risk-bearing subjects. Environment & Planning A, 45, 2663–2681.
- Johnson, L. (2015). Catastrophic fixes: Cyclical devaluation and accumulation through climate change impacts. Environment & Planning A, 47, 2503–2521.
- Kaufman, L. & Roston, E. (2020, November 10). Wildfires are close to torching the insurance industry in California. Bloomberg.
- Klein, N. (2015). This changes everything. Simon and Schuster.
- Lehtonen, T-K. (2017). Objectifying climate change: Weather-related catastrophes as risks and opportunities for reinsurance. Political Theory, 45(1), 32–51.
- Lehtonen, T-K. & Liukko, J. (2011). The forms and limits of insurance solidarity. Journal of Business Ethics, 103(1), 33–44.
- Lehtonen, T-K. & Liukko, J. (2015). Producing solidarity, inequality and exclusion through insurance. Res Publica, 21(2), 155–169.
- Lucas, C. & Booth, K. (2020). Privatizing climate adaptation: How insurance weakens solidaristic and collective disaster recovery. WIREs Climate Change, 11(6), e676, 1–14.
- Moody’s. (2018). Climate change risks outweigh opportunities for P&C (re)insurers. Retrieved from https://www.eenews.net/assets/2018/03/15/document_cw_01.pdf
- Munich Re. (2010, June 22). Munich Re climate summit at Shanghai EXPO highlights risks and opportunities of climate change. Press release. Retrieved from munichre.com
- Rowling, M. (2015, June 19). Insurance gains clout as climate change solution for the poor. Reuters.
- Stone, D. (2002). Beyond moral hazard: Insurance as moral opportunity. In T. Baker & J. Simon (Eds.) Embracing risk: The changing culture of insurance and responsibility (pp. 52–79). University of Chicago Press.
- Surminski, S., Bouwer, L. M. & Linnerooth-Bayer, J. (2016). How insurance can support climate resilience. Nature Climate Change, 6, 333–334.
- Swiss Re Institute. (2018). Sigma 4/2018: Profitability in non-life insurance: Mind the gap. Retrieved from swissre.com
- Swiss Re Institute. (2020). Swiss Re Institute estimates USD 83 billion global insured catastrophe losses in 2020, the fifth-costliest on record. Retrieved from https://www.swissre.com/media/news-releases/nr-20201215-sigma-full-year-2020-preliminary-natcat-loss-estimates.html
- Taylor, Z. J. (2020). The real estate risk fix: Residential insurance-linked securitization in the Florida metropolis. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 52(6), 1131–1149.
- US Global Change Research Program. (2018). Impacts, risks, and adaptation in the United States: Fourth national climate assessment, volume II: Report-in-brief. Government Printing Office.
- Walsh, M. W. (2018, November 20). How wildfires are making California homes uninsurable. The New York Times.