Towards a common vision of climate, peace, and security in Somalia

Somalia has long struggled to overcome the social, economic, and political fragmentation that arose following the 1991 civil war and the subsequent collapse of the central state. Since then, the country has experienced repeated cycles of internal strife and external intervention. The role of climate...

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Autores principales: Villa, Victor, Schapendonk, Frans, Sax, Niklas, Kenduiywo, Benson, Benzid, Rym, Nunow, Abdimajid, Pacillo, Grazia
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169331
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author Villa, Victor
Schapendonk, Frans
Sax, Niklas
Kenduiywo, Benson
Benzid, Rym
Nunow, Abdimajid
Pacillo, Grazia
author_browse Benzid, Rym
Kenduiywo, Benson
Nunow, Abdimajid
Pacillo, Grazia
Sax, Niklas
Schapendonk, Frans
Villa, Victor
author_facet Villa, Victor
Schapendonk, Frans
Sax, Niklas
Kenduiywo, Benson
Benzid, Rym
Nunow, Abdimajid
Pacillo, Grazia
author_sort Villa, Victor
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Somalia has long struggled to overcome the social, economic, and political fragmentation that arose following the 1991 civil war and the subsequent collapse of the central state. Since then, the country has experienced repeated cycles of internal strife and external intervention. The role of climate change and environmental degradation in further exacerbating these dynamics has become increasingly evident over the past decade or so. Aside from contributing to recurring humanitarian crises and displacement, environmental extremes also feed into the emergence of natural resource competition and offer new strategic opportunities for non-state armed groups (NSAGs) to further assert their dominance. Efforts to promote sustainable development within Somalia must account for these systemic interconnections across the realms of climate, peace, and security. The Alliance of Bioversity/CIAT’s FOCUS Climate Security team – in partnership with FAO Somalia and the IGAD Centre of Excellence for Climate Adaptation and Environmental Protection (IGAD CAEP) – held a 3-day workshop in Mogadishu to explore the challenges and opportunities for integrating climate, peace, and security into policy and programmatic frameworks.
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spelling CGSpace1693312025-12-08T09:54:28Z Towards a common vision of climate, peace, and security in Somalia Villa, Victor Schapendonk, Frans Sax, Niklas Kenduiywo, Benson Benzid, Rym Nunow, Abdimajid Pacillo, Grazia climate change mitigation climate change climate change adaptation peacebuilding conflict sensitivity Somalia has long struggled to overcome the social, economic, and political fragmentation that arose following the 1991 civil war and the subsequent collapse of the central state. Since then, the country has experienced repeated cycles of internal strife and external intervention. The role of climate change and environmental degradation in further exacerbating these dynamics has become increasingly evident over the past decade or so. Aside from contributing to recurring humanitarian crises and displacement, environmental extremes also feed into the emergence of natural resource competition and offer new strategic opportunities for non-state armed groups (NSAGs) to further assert their dominance. Efforts to promote sustainable development within Somalia must account for these systemic interconnections across the realms of climate, peace, and security. The Alliance of Bioversity/CIAT’s FOCUS Climate Security team – in partnership with FAO Somalia and the IGAD Centre of Excellence for Climate Adaptation and Environmental Protection (IGAD CAEP) – held a 3-day workshop in Mogadishu to explore the challenges and opportunities for integrating climate, peace, and security into policy and programmatic frameworks. 2024-12-21 2025-01-17T13:42:04Z 2025-01-17T13:42:04Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169331 en Open Access application/pdf Villa, V.; Schapendonk, F.; Sax, N.; Kenduiywo, B.; Benzid, R.; Nunow, A.; Pacillo, G. (2024) Towards a common vision of climate, peace, and security in Somalia. 44 p.
spellingShingle climate change mitigation
climate change
climate change adaptation
peacebuilding
conflict sensitivity
Villa, Victor
Schapendonk, Frans
Sax, Niklas
Kenduiywo, Benson
Benzid, Rym
Nunow, Abdimajid
Pacillo, Grazia
Towards a common vision of climate, peace, and security in Somalia
title Towards a common vision of climate, peace, and security in Somalia
title_full Towards a common vision of climate, peace, and security in Somalia
title_fullStr Towards a common vision of climate, peace, and security in Somalia
title_full_unstemmed Towards a common vision of climate, peace, and security in Somalia
title_short Towards a common vision of climate, peace, and security in Somalia
title_sort towards a common vision of climate peace and security in somalia
topic climate change mitigation
climate change
climate change adaptation
peacebuilding
conflict sensitivity
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169331
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