Climate Security Observatory - Somalia

Climate security explores whether climate change increases the risk of armed conflict and, if so, under which circumstances this relationship occurs. People in fragile and conflict-affected areas are also among the most vulnerable to climate change, making it vital to understand the climate-conflict...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sax, Niklas, Schapendonk, Frans, Kenduiywo, Benson, Villa, Victor, Craparo, Alessandro, Benzid, Rym, Nunow, Abdimajid, Pacillo, Grazia
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170219
_version_ 1855523642671104000
author Sax, Niklas
Schapendonk, Frans
Kenduiywo, Benson
Villa, Victor
Craparo, Alessandro
Benzid, Rym
Nunow, Abdimajid
Pacillo, Grazia
author_browse Benzid, Rym
Craparo, Alessandro
Kenduiywo, Benson
Nunow, Abdimajid
Pacillo, Grazia
Sax, Niklas
Schapendonk, Frans
Villa, Victor
author_facet Sax, Niklas
Schapendonk, Frans
Kenduiywo, Benson
Villa, Victor
Craparo, Alessandro
Benzid, Rym
Nunow, Abdimajid
Pacillo, Grazia
author_sort Sax, Niklas
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Climate security explores whether climate change increases the risk of armed conflict and, if so, under which circumstances this relationship occurs. People in fragile and conflict-affected areas are also among the most vulnerable to climate change, making it vital to understand the climate-conflict interplay for resilience and peacebuilding. A major challenge for governments in vulnerable, fragile, and conflict-affected regions is managing these complex interactions. Currently, they lack effective tools to implement climate strategies that address social grievances driving conflict and adapt to changing dynamics. In response, conflict-sensitive approaches to climate action are gaining support as mechanisms to ensure transitions to carbon-neutral economies and climate-resilient societies are equitable and aligned with peacebuilding goals. This report summarizes six intersecting pathways between climate, peace, and security in Somalia developed through a multi-methods approach. It also assesses Somalia's current policy landscape to evaluate whether it currently evidences strategic and operational linkages across key policy sectors for climate, peace, and security, and puts forward a set of policy and programming recommendations to orient climate action to mitigate underlying drivers of conflict and contribute to a sustainable peace.
format Brief
id CGSpace170219
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1702192025-11-05T11:34:26Z Climate Security Observatory - Somalia Sax, Niklas Schapendonk, Frans Kenduiywo, Benson Villa, Victor Craparo, Alessandro Benzid, Rym Nunow, Abdimajid Pacillo, Grazia climate change climate change adaptation peacebuilding conflict sensitivity Climate security explores whether climate change increases the risk of armed conflict and, if so, under which circumstances this relationship occurs. People in fragile and conflict-affected areas are also among the most vulnerable to climate change, making it vital to understand the climate-conflict interplay for resilience and peacebuilding. A major challenge for governments in vulnerable, fragile, and conflict-affected regions is managing these complex interactions. Currently, they lack effective tools to implement climate strategies that address social grievances driving conflict and adapt to changing dynamics. In response, conflict-sensitive approaches to climate action are gaining support as mechanisms to ensure transitions to carbon-neutral economies and climate-resilient societies are equitable and aligned with peacebuilding goals. This report summarizes six intersecting pathways between climate, peace, and security in Somalia developed through a multi-methods approach. It also assesses Somalia's current policy landscape to evaluate whether it currently evidences strategic and operational linkages across key policy sectors for climate, peace, and security, and puts forward a set of policy and programming recommendations to orient climate action to mitigate underlying drivers of conflict and contribute to a sustainable peace. 2024-12-10 2025-01-28T13:42:46Z 2025-01-28T13:42:46Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170219 en Open Access application/pdf Sax, N.; Schapendonk, F.; Kenduiywo, B.; Villa, V.; Craparo, A.; Benzid, R.; Nunow, A.; Pacillo, G. (2024) Climate Security Observatory - Somalia. 21 p.
spellingShingle climate change
climate change adaptation
peacebuilding
conflict sensitivity
Sax, Niklas
Schapendonk, Frans
Kenduiywo, Benson
Villa, Victor
Craparo, Alessandro
Benzid, Rym
Nunow, Abdimajid
Pacillo, Grazia
Climate Security Observatory - Somalia
title Climate Security Observatory - Somalia
title_full Climate Security Observatory - Somalia
title_fullStr Climate Security Observatory - Somalia
title_full_unstemmed Climate Security Observatory - Somalia
title_short Climate Security Observatory - Somalia
title_sort climate security observatory somalia
topic climate change
climate change adaptation
peacebuilding
conflict sensitivity
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170219
work_keys_str_mv AT saxniklas climatesecurityobservatorysomalia
AT schapendonkfrans climatesecurityobservatorysomalia
AT kenduiywobenson climatesecurityobservatorysomalia
AT villavictor climatesecurityobservatorysomalia
AT craparoalessandro climatesecurityobservatorysomalia
AT benzidrym climatesecurityobservatorysomalia
AT nunowabdimajid climatesecurityobservatorysomalia
AT pacillograzia climatesecurityobservatorysomalia