Climate Change and Conflict: What are the links and where is the evidence?
FSI Stanford, FSE Project (Completed)2009-present
Researchers
Rosamond L. Naylor - Stanford University
David Lobell - Stanford University
Kaitlin Shilling
This project stems from the collaborations and faculty seminars developed as part of a larger grant funded by the Presidential Fund for Innovation in International Studies, Feeding the World in the 21st Century. The project will examine the connections between climate change and variability and violent conflict through interdisciplinary empirical research that builds on Stanford's particular strengths in climate science, food security, demographics and conflict studies. The research results will be used to develop a course for graduate students in International Policy Studies and the Public Policy program. This new course offering would help students to develop the analytical tools to understand existing climate models, their accompanying uncertainty, and the potential impacts climate change might have on migration, economic stress, health, and links to conflict. It would additionally challenge them to develop appropriate policy responses that address the ethical issues at stake. An underlying aim of the project will be to make a substantive contribution to understanding climate change and variability, and its attendant impacts on already fragile states; thus making a significant contribution to advancing knowledge in hte field and the related critical policy debate.
Contact
Kaitlin Shilling
Funding provided by
• FSI
• Stanford's Presidential Fund for Innovation in International Studies
Publications
- Climate Change and Conflict: Identifying the mechanisms
Kaitlin Shilling
(2011)
Warming Increases Risk of Civil War in Africa
Marshall Burke, Edward Miguel, Shanker Satyanath, John Dykema, David Lobell
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2009)



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