• ecsp

New Security Beat

Subscribe:
  • mail-to
  • Who We Are
  • Topics
    • Population
    • Environment
    • Security
    • Health
    • Development
  • Columns
    • China Environment Forum
    • Choke Point
    • Dot-Mom
    • Navigating the Poles
    • New Security Broadcast
    • Reading Radar
  • Multimedia
    • Water Stories (Podcast Series)
    • Backdraft (Podcast Series)
    • Tracking the Energy Titans (Interactive)
  • Films
    • Water, Conflict, and Peacebuilding (Animated Short)
    • Paving the Way (Ethiopia)
    • Broken Landscape (India)
    • Scaling the Mountain (Nepal)
    • Healthy People, Healthy Environment (Tanzania)
  • Publications
  • Events
  • Contact Us

NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Reading Radar

    Crunching the Numbers on Climate Change, Conflict, and Food Aid

    December 31, 2014 By Sarah Meyerhoff

    Two studies push back on recent analyses that claim to demonstrate empirical links between food aid and conflict and climate change and conflict.

    This summer, Nathan Nunn and Nancy Qiang argued in a co-authored paper that food aid, susceptible to theft by rebel groups, tends to extend the duration of intrastate conflict. But a USAID technical brief published in October disputes their analysis. Scholars at the University of Maryland’s Center for International Development and Conflict Management replicated Nunn and Qiang’s analysis, but made two key modifications: first, they excluded several years for which wheat data is spotty (1971 to 1974), and second, they included a number of omitted variables that could also play a significant role in prolonging or ending conflict, including domestic funding sources for rebels, ethnic grievances, spillovers from neighboring conflicts, and peacekeeping interventions. They found that the relationship between food aid and duration of conflict was not statistically significant with the first several years of data removed and that state-led support of rebel groups is a far more influential factor. The brief recommends that researchers explore the relationship between food aid and conflict with more disaggregated data, broken down by aid program and conflict, as well as the dynamics of state-rebel interactions.

    In a review article recently published in Climatic Change, a group of scholars dispute earlier findings that support a broad causal association between climate change and conflict. That paper, a meta-analysis of 50 quantitative studies on climate and conflict published a year ago in Science, argues that every increase by one standard deviation in temperature or rainfall produces an 11 percent change in the risk of intergroup fighting. However, writes Halvard Buhaug of the Peace Research Institute Oslo and more than two dozen colleagues, many of the studies that the meta-analysis draws on overlap, so the effect of climate is over-amplified. More significantly, they say, the types of conflicts studied and the roles climate impacts may play in them are too wide ranging to be compared. The authors performed an altered version of the meta-analysis, which supports the notion that the relationship between climate change and conflict is less conclusive. The lead author of the Science article, Solomon Hsiang, has since responded to the Buhaug’s rebuttal.

    Sources: Climatic Change, USAID.

    Topics: climate change, conflict, development, environment, environmental security, food security, humanitarian, Reading Radar, security, USAID

Join the Conversation

  • RSS
  • subscribe
  • facebook
  • G+
  • twitter
  • iTunes
  • podomatic
  • youtube
Tweets by NewSecurityBeat

Featured Media

Backdraft Podcast

play Backdraft
Podcasts

More »

What You're Saying

  • Closing the Women’s Health Gap Report: Much Needed Recognition for Endometriosis and Menopause
    Aditya Belose: This blog effectively highlights the importance of recognizing conditions like endometriosis &...
  • International Women’s Day 2024: Investment Can Promote Equality
    Aditya Belose: This is a powerful and informative blog on the importance of investing in women for gender equality!...
  • A Warmer Arctic Presents Challenges and Opportunities
    Dan Strombom: The link to the Georgetown report did not work

What We’re Reading

  • U.S. Security Assistance Helped Produce Burkina Faso's Coup
  • https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/2022/02/02/equal-rights-amendment-debate/
  • India's Economy and Unemployment Loom Over State Elections
  • How Big Business Is Taking the Lead on Climate Change
  • Iraqi olive farmers look to the sun to power their production
More »

Related Stories

  • Unpacking the Impact of the Fifth National Climate Assessment
  • ECSP Weekly Watch | September 18 – 22
  • ecsp
  • RSS Feed
  • YouTube
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Home
  • Who We Are
  • Publications
  • Events
  • Wilson Center
  • Contact Us
  • Print Friendly Page

© Copyright 2007-2025. Environmental Change and Security Program.

Developed by Vico Rock Media

Environmental Change and Security Program

T 202-691-4000