Climate Change and Violent Conflict in the Middle East and North Africa

Author:

Kim Kyungmee1ORCID,Garcia Tània Ferré2

Affiliation:

1. Stockholm International Peace Research Institute , Sweden

2. ESADE-Ramon Llull University , Spain

Abstract

Abstract Previous research has demonstrated that climate change can escalate the risks for violent conflict through various pathways. Existing evidence suggests that contextual factors, such as migration and livelihood options, governance arrangements, and existing conflict dynamics, can influence the pathways through which climate change leads to conflict. This important insight leads to an inquiry to identify sets of conditions and processes that make climate-related violent conflict more likely. In this analytic essay, we conduct a systematic review of scholarly literature published during the period 1989–2022 and explore the climate-conflict pathways in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. Through the systematic review of forty-one peer-reviewed publications in English, we identify that society’s ability to cope with the changing climate and extreme weather events is influenced by a range of factors, including preceding government policies that led to the mismanagement of land and water and existing conflict dynamics in the MENA region. Empirical research to unpack the complex and diverse relationship between the climate shocks and violent conflict in the MENA region needs advancing. Several avenues for future research are highlighted such as more studies on North Africa and the Gulf region, with focus on the implications of floods and heatwaves, and exploring climate implications on non-agriculture sectors including the critical oil sector.

Funder

Ministry for Foreign Affairs

Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference117 articles.

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4. Projected Change in Temperature and Precipitation Over Africa from CMIP6;Almazroui;Earth Systems and Environment,2020

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