In the second climate change, conflict and security scan, we summarise the latest developments on Twitter, in the blogosphere, and in grey and academic literature to find new themes and emerging discourse on the intersection of climate and conflict risk.
A review of evidence across this quadrimester, from August to November 2018, reveals a continuation of themes identified in the first scan, including:
We discover new areas of focus, such as conflict risk associated with the transition to low carbon development and geoengineering, and we find concrete analysis being undertaken through climate-fragility risk assessments in the Lake Chad region.
From Camel to Cup' explores the importance of camels and camel milk in drought ridden regions, and the under-reported medicinal and vital health benefits of camel milk
Less than 5 percent of disaster losses are covered by insurance in poorer countries, versus 50 percent in rich nations
Age, gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation and many more factors must be considered if people are to become resilient to climate extremes
A concern is around the long-term viability of hard-fought development gains
In Kenya's Wajir county, the emphasis on water development is happening at the expense of good water governance