A typology of climate-conflicts in the Amazon: A scoping review of the unintended socio-political consequences of climate action and inaction
The Amazon biome faces mounting pressures from climate change, land-use transformation, and entrenched socio-political inequalities, creating complex risks for ecosystems, livelihoods, and governance. Projections suggest widespread forest dieback, intensified droughts, and extreme rainfall, with con...
| Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , |
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| Formato: | Informe técnico |
| Lenguaje: | Inglés |
| Publicado: |
2025
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| Acceso en línea: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176782 |
| _version_ | 1855535949247676416 |
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| author | Medina, Leonardo Higuera Florez, Julian Penel, Charlotte Carneiro, Bia Tucci, Giulia Madurga Lopez, Ignacio Navarrete Frías, Carolina Bonatti, Michelle Pacillo, Grazia |
| author_browse | Bonatti, Michelle Carneiro, Bia Higuera Florez, Julian Madurga Lopez, Ignacio Medina, Leonardo Navarrete Frías, Carolina Pacillo, Grazia Penel, Charlotte Tucci, Giulia |
| author_facet | Medina, Leonardo Higuera Florez, Julian Penel, Charlotte Carneiro, Bia Tucci, Giulia Madurga Lopez, Ignacio Navarrete Frías, Carolina Bonatti, Michelle Pacillo, Grazia |
| author_sort | Medina, Leonardo |
| collection | Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace) |
| description | The Amazon biome faces mounting pressures from climate change, land-use transformation, and entrenched socio-political inequalities, creating complex risks for ecosystems, livelihoods, and governance. Projections suggest widespread forest dieback, intensified droughts, and extreme rainfall, with consequences that extend beyond ecological and economic damage to strain institutions and heighten resource competition. This report presents a scoping review of evidence on climate–conflict linkages in the Amazon, examining how both climate action and inaction interact with historical inequalities, governance arrangements, and cultural dynamics. Findings highlight that mitigation and adaptation efforts—particularly forest conservation, renewable energy projects, and infrastructure development—have often generated tensions when imposed through top-down, restrictive, or militarized approaches that marginalize Indigenous peoples and local communities. By contrast, participatory initiatives that respect territorial rights, promote equitable benefit-sharing, and integrate Indigenous knowledge have strengthened cooperation, livelihoods, and trust in governance. Evidence on the consequences of climate inaction remains comparatively sparse, despite clear recognition of how droughts, floods, displacement, and institutional weaknesses intersect with conflict risks. The analysis identifies eleven climate–conflict clusters across the region, organized into four categories: direct and indirect consequences of climate interventions, and direct and indirect consequences of failing to act. |
| format | Informe técnico |
| id | CGSpace176782 |
| institution | CGIAR Consortium |
| language | Inglés |
| publishDate | 2025 |
| publishDateRange | 2025 |
| publishDateSort | 2025 |
| record_format | dspace |
| spelling | CGSpace1767822025-12-08T09:54:28Z A typology of climate-conflicts in the Amazon: A scoping review of the unintended socio-political consequences of climate action and inaction Medina, Leonardo Higuera Florez, Julian Penel, Charlotte Carneiro, Bia Tucci, Giulia Madurga Lopez, Ignacio Navarrete Frías, Carolina Bonatti, Michelle Pacillo, Grazia livelihoods amazonia policies conflict sensitivity climate action The Amazon biome faces mounting pressures from climate change, land-use transformation, and entrenched socio-political inequalities, creating complex risks for ecosystems, livelihoods, and governance. Projections suggest widespread forest dieback, intensified droughts, and extreme rainfall, with consequences that extend beyond ecological and economic damage to strain institutions and heighten resource competition. This report presents a scoping review of evidence on climate–conflict linkages in the Amazon, examining how both climate action and inaction interact with historical inequalities, governance arrangements, and cultural dynamics. Findings highlight that mitigation and adaptation efforts—particularly forest conservation, renewable energy projects, and infrastructure development—have often generated tensions when imposed through top-down, restrictive, or militarized approaches that marginalize Indigenous peoples and local communities. By contrast, participatory initiatives that respect territorial rights, promote equitable benefit-sharing, and integrate Indigenous knowledge have strengthened cooperation, livelihoods, and trust in governance. Evidence on the consequences of climate inaction remains comparatively sparse, despite clear recognition of how droughts, floods, displacement, and institutional weaknesses intersect with conflict risks. The analysis identifies eleven climate–conflict clusters across the region, organized into four categories: direct and indirect consequences of climate interventions, and direct and indirect consequences of failing to act. 2025-09 2025-10-02T08:33:37Z 2025-10-02T08:33:37Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176782 en Open Access application/pdf Medina, L.; Higuera Florez, J.; Penel, C.; Carneiro, B.; Tucci, G.; Madurga Lopez, I.; Navarrete Frías, C.; Bonatti, M.; Pacillo, G. (2025) A typology of climate-conflicts in the Amazon: A scoping review of the unintended socio-political consequences of climate action and inaction. Montpellier (France): CGIAR Climate Security. 39 p. |
| spellingShingle | livelihoods amazonia policies conflict sensitivity climate action Medina, Leonardo Higuera Florez, Julian Penel, Charlotte Carneiro, Bia Tucci, Giulia Madurga Lopez, Ignacio Navarrete Frías, Carolina Bonatti, Michelle Pacillo, Grazia A typology of climate-conflicts in the Amazon: A scoping review of the unintended socio-political consequences of climate action and inaction |
| title | A typology of climate-conflicts in the Amazon: A scoping review of the unintended socio-political consequences of climate action and inaction |
| title_full | A typology of climate-conflicts in the Amazon: A scoping review of the unintended socio-political consequences of climate action and inaction |
| title_fullStr | A typology of climate-conflicts in the Amazon: A scoping review of the unintended socio-political consequences of climate action and inaction |
| title_full_unstemmed | A typology of climate-conflicts in the Amazon: A scoping review of the unintended socio-political consequences of climate action and inaction |
| title_short | A typology of climate-conflicts in the Amazon: A scoping review of the unintended socio-political consequences of climate action and inaction |
| title_sort | typology of climate conflicts in the amazon a scoping review of the unintended socio political consequences of climate action and inaction |
| topic | livelihoods amazonia policies conflict sensitivity climate action |
| url | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176782 |
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