Unpacking the Food Security Crisis in the Ecologically Fragile and Conflict-Ridden Lake Chad Basin: Interrogating NGOs' Response to the Climate Change-Security Nexus

Author:

Fonjong Lotsmart1ORCID,Wanki James E.2

Affiliation:

1. University of Cincinnati, Bambili, Cameroon

2. McGill University, Quebec, QC, Canada

Abstract

A 2018 United Nations report [Citation need] highlights the growing need for funding and assistance to the Lake Chad Basin (LCB). The food security crisis in the LCB is a blend of complex factors relating to the declining water of Lake Chad and protracted insecurity fanned by Boko Haram insurgency. Unfortunately, development agencies sometimes focus less on how the climate change-insecurity nexus is becoming increasingly consequential in explaining the LCB’s profile in fragility. This paper considers the extent to which international agencies and nongovernmental organizations (INGOs) respond to multiple crises, integrating both climate change and security facets in their analysis and response to the food crisis besetting the LCB. Findings from interviews in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger reveal that NGOs fail to sufficiently take climate change into account in their policies and strategies, in that many food assistance programs are climate change neutral in content and focus.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Development,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference45 articles.

1. AfDB [Africa Development Bank] (2015) Lake Chad, a living example of the devastation climate change is wreaking on Africa | Banque africaine de développement - Bâtir aujourd'hui, une meilleure Afrique demain. https://www.afdb.org

2. Aminga V. M., Krampe F. (2020). Climate-related security risks and the african union. Retrieved from Stockholm International Peace Research Institute website. https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-417778

3. Beckett M. (2007). A threat to global security.Margaret Beckett - A threat to global security. https://www.worldbulletin.net

4. Bergholt D., Lujala P. (2012). Climate-related natural disasters, economic growth, and armed civil conflict. Journal of Peace Research, 49(1), 147–162. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022343311426167

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