Though the bull market for metals and energy may be ending, global food prices remain stubbornly high.
Beginning in late 2012, a rehabilitated coalition of ex-rebel militia fighters, known as Séléka, reignited conflict in the Central African Republic (CAR) over what it believed was the central government’s failure to abide by the 2007 and 2011 peace agreements.
While much of the debate around climate financing focuses on “how much,” an equally important question is “how?”
At the Third Meeting of the School for Environmental Leaders in Potosí, leaders and representatives of the communities affected by environmental pollution met to discuss environmental problems in Bolivia. The conclusions from this meeting contrast the discourse of Evo Morales’ government regarding the rights of Mother Earth with the reality that the Bolivian economy hinges on the “commodity export” model.
This DFID-approved Topic Guide reviews the latest evidence on the relationship between climate change, environmental stress and conflict in a way that is suitable specifically for policy makers’ needs. Evidence gaps and their implications for practice are also addressed. Furthermore, the publication reflects upon ways to improve political action in light of existing knowledge and dedicates a section to the challenges politics faces.
The “thirst for oil” is often put forward as a near self-evident explanation behind military interventions in Libya, for instance, or Sudan. Oil, or the lack of oil, is also said to be behind the absence of intervention in Syria now and in Rwanda in 1994.
At 11 million head, cattle outnumber people in South Sudan and are central to the country’s economy and society.