The Climate Conflict Trap: Examining the Impact of Climate Change on Violent Conflict in Sub-Saharan Africa

Maya Garfinkel
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Abstract

As recently as 2019, international security officials reported that international state sponsors of terrorism, such as ISIL, were moving into Sub-Saharan Africa. The causal links between climate change and conflict, especially in an understudied and misunderstood region such as Sub-Saharan Africa, are often complicated and ill-defined. In reality, climate change does not unilaterally or unconditionally strengthen terrorist organizations and, by extension, civil conflict. The circumstances of climate change impact the trajectory of violent non-state armed groups in Sub-Saharan Africa through three primary mechanisms that intersect and interact with one another: natural resource instability, colonialism, and the intensity of intra-state tensions throughout a particular region. Through these three primary lenses, it is evident that, in Sub-Saharan Africa, the effects of climate change exacerbate conditions that, in turn, provide a unique, fertile environment for violent non-state armed groups to develop and thrive.
气候冲突陷阱:研究气候变化对撒哈拉以南非洲暴力冲突的影响
就在2019年,国际安全官员报告说,支持恐怖主义的国际国家,如伊斯兰国,正在进入撒哈拉以南非洲。气候变化和冲突之间的因果关系,特别是在撒哈拉以南非洲这样一个研究不足和误解的地区,往往是复杂和不明确的。实际上,气候变化不会单方面或无条件地加强恐怖组织,进而助长国内冲突。气候变化的环境通过三个相互交叉和相互作用的主要机制影响撒哈拉以南非洲地区暴力非国家武装团体的轨迹:自然资源不稳定、殖民主义和整个特定地区的国家内部紧张局势的强度。通过这三个主要镜头,很明显,在撒哈拉以南非洲,气候变化的影响加剧了条件,反过来又为暴力的非国家武装团体的发展和繁荣提供了独特的肥沃环境。
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