Publication

Feb 2011

In Africa, climate effects will be severe and capacity for mitigation and adaptation is low, which means that if climate change leads to conflict, Africa will likely be the first to suffer. Yet, understanding and responding to the threat of climate-driven instability in Africa requires a more nuanced definition of conflict: one that recognizes episodic unrest, riots, and demonstrations as well as interstate or civil war. Rainfall has a surprising influence on the prevalence of social conflict: the new Social Conflict in Africa Database reveals that in recent decades, conflict events have been more common in extremely wet and dry years than in years of normal rainfall.

Download English (PDF, 8 pages, 858 KB)
Author Cullen Hendrix, Idean Salehyan
Series CCAPS Briefs
Issue 2
Publisher Climate Change and African Political Stability (CCAPS) Program
Copyright © 2011 Robert S. Strauss Center for International Security and Law
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