Екологічна безпека та збалансоване ресурсокористування (Jun 2022)
Reflections on the nexus between climate change, food security and violent conflicts: A tour through the Nigeria experience
Abstract
Climate change has been adjudged as the most treacherous threat to global sustainability, having its deteriorating effects on the ecosystems in the form of increase in temperature, heat waves, haphazard changes in the pattern of rainfall, rising of the sea level etc. We believe that the consequential impacts of climate change on food, biodiversity, health, and the overall economy have been of great concern in Nigeria and to Africa as a whole. Because of this, in this study we will try to demonstrate the intricate relationship between climate change, food security and violent conflicts in Nigeria, especially the root causes of famers-Fulani herdsmen clashes, the goal being a provision of sustainable conflict management strategy to the crisis. A mixed method research design (basically a mix of research papers’ syntheses, causal loop diagram, interviews/focused group discussions and the social progress index data) was analysed and adopted to achieve the study’s specific objectives. The causal loop diagram demonstrated the interconnectivity of climate change, food security and violent conflicts. Interestingly, most respondents (70%) ranked “resource scarcity due to increased desertification” as the top-rated cause for farmers-Fulani’s herdsmen clashes while less than one-quarter (21%) emphasised that urbanisation and social vices propelling the conflict. Considering these findings, we reasoned that there is a critical need to increase the capacity of local communities to take on key governance roles around resource management while remediation and appropriate management measures of affected and vulnerable regions must commence without further delay. The Government should strengthen police capacity to curb rustling and banditry, improving livestock tracking
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