Extreme Weather and Civil War in Somalia: Does Drought Fuel Conflict through Livestock Price Shocks?

Jean-François Maystadt, O. Ecker, A. Mabiso
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引用次数: 51

Abstract

Climate change leads to more frequent and more intense droughts in Somalia. In a global context, weather shocks have been found to perpetuate poverty and fuel civil conflict. By relating regional and temporal variations in violent conflict outbreaks with drought incidence and severity, we show that this causality is valid also for Somalia at the local level. We find that livestock price shocks drive drought-induced conflicts through reducing the opportunity costs of conflict participation. Our estimation results indicate that a temperature rise of around 3.2 degrees Celsius—corresponding to the median Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change scenario for eastern Africa by the end of the century—would lower cattle prices by about 4 percent and, in turn, increase the incidence of violent conflict by about 58 percent. Hence climate change will further aggravate Somalia’s security challenges and calls for decisive action to strengthen both drought and conflict resilience, especially in pastoralist and agropastoralist livelihoods.
索马里的极端天气和内战:干旱是否通过牲畜价格冲击加剧了冲突?
气候变化导致索马里的干旱更加频繁和严重。在全球范围内,人们发现天气冲击会使贫困永久化并加剧国内冲突。通过将暴力冲突爆发的区域和时间变化与干旱发生率和严重程度联系起来,我们表明,这种因果关系在索马里地方一级也是有效的。我们发现,牲畜价格冲击通过降低参与冲突的机会成本来推动干旱引发的冲突。我们的估计结果表明,到本世纪末,气温上升约3.2摄氏度——与政府间气候变化专门委员会对东非的预测中值相对应——将使牛的价格下降约4%,反过来,暴力冲突的发生率增加约58%。因此,气候变化将进一步加剧索马里的安全挑战,并呼吁采取果断行动,加强抗旱和冲突能力,特别是在牧民和农牧民生计方面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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