Climate-driven risks to peace over the 21st century
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Buhaug, Halvard; Elisabeth Gilmore; Tor A. Benjaminsen & Cullen Hendrix (2023) Climate-driven risks to peace over the 21st century, Climate Risk Management 39(100471).
Anthropogenic climate change is commonly characterized as a
threat to human security. However, the extent to which and under what
conditions climate impacts and responses may produce severe risks to peace have
seen less systematically assessment to date. This essay provides a conceptual
discussion of what risks to peace entail and how such risks might be considered
severe, acknowledging that perceptions, values, and social scale must be
grappled with in the identification of severity. Informed by available
empirical research, the essay then explores the conditions under which climate-related
risks could become severe during this century. Three illustrative scenarios based
on different assumptions about climate-driven risks and risks related to social
responses to climate change serve to illustrate how alternative warming and adaptation
trajectories will have distinct implications for the prospect of future peace.
The essay ends by reflecting on some implications for future research needs.
Read the article here (Open Access)
Authors
Associate Research Professor
Associate Senior Researcher
University of California, San Diego