Vicious circles: Violence, vulnerability, and climate change
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Buhaug, Halvard & Nina von Uexkull (2021) Vicious circles: Violence, vulnerability, and climate change, Annual Review of Environment and Resources 46: 545–568.
Climate change threatens core dimensions of human security,
including economic prosperity, food availability, and societal stability. In
recent years, war-torn regions such as Afghanistan and Yemen have harbored
severe humanitarian crises, compounded by climate-related hazards. These cases
epitomize the powerful but presently incompletely appreciated links between
vulnerability, conflict, and climate-related impacts. In this article, we
develop a unified conceptual model of these phenomena by connecting three
fields of research that traditionally have had little interaction: (a)
determinants of social vulnerability to climate change, (b) climatic drivers of
armed conflict risk, and (c) societal impacts of armed conflict. In doing so,
we demonstrate how many of the conditions that shape vulnerability to climate
change also increase the likelihood of climate–conflict interactions and,
furthermore, that impacts from armed conflict aggravate these conditions. The
end result may be a vicious circle locking affected societies in a trap of
violence, vulnerability, and climate change impacts.
Read the article here (Open Access)
Authors
Associate Senior Researcher