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Climate resilience and conflict: Multi-stakeholder partnerships as a way forward?

Climate-Conflict Nexus

War, violence and social conflict, as we know, destroys lives and breaks down the societal systems that people rely on daily. The resulting loss of food, shelter and access to clean drinking water following extreme weather events like droughts, storms and floods are amplified in conflict zones already experiencing such resource disruptions and shortages. Meanwhile, long-term environmental degradation caused by extreme temperatures and sea-level rise undermine the ecological integrity of entire world regions. These environmental shifts deplete communal or public resources, make land scarce or unlivable, and eventually forces people across political borders.

For groups that were already in disputes over land rights, territorial claims, and resource access or distribution, climate change increases the stakes – escalating or rehashing conflicts. Longstanding farmer-herder disputes, for example, have been on the rise in northern Nigeria as water shortages drive nomadic pastoralists closer south into neighbouring territory in search of greener grazing pastures for their livestock. Meanwhile there are more reports of violent clashes over the little water remaining in Lake Chad, which is drying up due to extreme heat and low precipitation in the region. The loss of surface water has placed significant social and economic strain on the over 30 million people who depended on the lake for food and livelihood, and potentially fueling recruitment of unemployed youth by extremist groups.

More international conflicts could also emerge from the climate crisis. One of the earlier focal points for understanding the climate-conflict nexus was the conflict in Syria. Recent empirical studies show that long dry conditions associated with climate change precipitated violence, initiated by both government and rebel groups in later years of the country’s civil war. A report published by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) also noted rising tensions between India and Bangladesh, following floods washing away river islands known as “chars,” which are a source of maritime boundary dispute between the neighbouring countries.

Furthermore, the refugee crisis in Southeast Asia is being aggravated by extreme weather events linked to climate change. For decades Rohingya people have experienced religious and ethnic persecution in Myanmar, causing thousands to seek refuge in neighbouring countries, including Pakistan, Bangladesh and Malaysia. Many of them, settling at the outskirts and borderlands of these receiving countries.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reports that over 850,000 Rohingya people have settled in Bangladesh’s Cox Bazar region, which now has the largest refugee camp in the world. Increasingly active monsoon seasons for the last couple of years have severely impacted these refugee camps, flooding and destroying shelters, causing further displacement. In response, the Bangladesh government relocated thousands of Rohingya refugees to Bhasan Char, one of the remote low-lying river islands in the Bay of Bengal, which is also vulnerable to climate change. Climate displacement and Bangladesh’s subsequent controversial resettlement of the Rohingya refugee population on these remote islands have only stirred more disagreements between neighbouring countries in the region.

Conflict-sensitive Resilience

These intensifying climate-provoked conflict situations, underscore the urgent need for approaches to conflict resolution that recognises the connections between the natural environment, economic security, and social and political stability. Military and social responses alone in resolving conflict or preserving peace are futile without considering the climate-conflict nexus. Resolutions, no matter how peace-building they seem, will not adequately address loss of life or guarantee democratic stability in geographies that are severe climate change hotspots. And climate solutions, no matter how sustainable they appear, are at greater risk of being compromised in conflict zones – making the case for more conflict-sensitive adaptation strategies.

As a holistic approach to climate adaptation, climate resilience offers a valuable conceptual and analytical framework for responding to the structural vulnerabilities that place people, landscapes and countries at high or disproportional risks to climate change. Climate resilience is the capacity for a socio-ecological system to adapt, reorganise, and evolve  into  more  desirable configurations that improve the present and future sustainability of the system. Climate resilience-building calls on stakeholders to pay closer attention to the implications of pre-existing structural vulnerabilities, including political conflict, governance inadequacies and level of development.

Multi-Stakeholder Pathways

In developing countries and in conflict zones found around the world, public finance for human and technical resources to implement, and scale-up climate resilience projects are often limited or unavailable due to corrupt forces. Over the years, a key feature of relatively successful conflict resolution and climate resilience-building programs in these geographies has been resource pooling and policy-action coalitions among civil society groups, local community members, business leaders, international organisations and NGOs. Multi-stakeholder partnerships are therefore crucial in how climate resilience is approached, implemented, or deployed.

By intuitively calling upon multiple actors, some climate resilience-building projects implemented in conflict zones have brought parties to conflict into dialogue with each other. For instance, more recent dispute resolution programs between farmers and herders across Africa’s Sahel and neighbouring regions are attempting to create a peace architecture that facilitates resource sharing and regular dialogue between the two groups. Conflict mediation, if effectively amplified in climate resilience-building projects, promotes resource sharing, minimises trade-offs, and compels cross-community buy-in that in the long-term not only builds climate resilience but also builds peace in geographies at the carrefour of conflict and climate change.

 

To learn more, explore our Case Studies on climate-conflict relations, and how these have been or could be addressed via cooperation and resolution processes.

See for example our case studies on the Lake Chad Basin and the Syrian civil war.

 

This article was originally published on blogs.prio.org.