Natural Resources, Conflict, and Peacebuilding

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Transcription:

Natural Resources, Conflict, and Peacebuilding Roger-Mark De Souza Director of Population, Environmental Security, and Resilience Woodrow Wilson Center May 31, 2014

Woodrow Wilson Center Living memorial to President Wilson Jane Harman 9 term L.A. Congresswoman Facilitate research, dialogue, and actionable ideas among academics, policy and practice communities #1 US think tank to watch; among top 10 in the world Environmental changes can exacerbate conflict and help build peace

Three Key Points How are natural resources and conflict connected? How have these connections been managed? What have we been doing to contribute to international education on these topics?

Resource Conflict Used in cell phones and laptop computers, the 3Ts: tin, tantalum, and tungsten are also sold profitably by armed groups in eastern Congo. Seen here is tin ore. Photo credit: Flickr user ENOUGH Project Allocation, management, or use of natural resources results in: Violence Human rights abuses No access to resources so that diminishes well-being Rarely linear cause and effect

Resource Capture, Scarcity, and Curse Capture abundance and opportunities Scarcity physical scarcity or governance/distribution factors Curse undiversified exports and political fragility

Financing & Sustaining Conflict Between 1989 and 2009, at least eighteen cases of civil war and internal unrest were supported by revenue from natural resources. (Source: UNEP, From Conflict to Peacebuilding)

Undermining Peace Economic incentives provided by the exploitation of natural resources can undermine prospective peace agreements and create barriers to political reintegration and reconciliation.

Environmental Scarcity and Conflict Connections The environment is neither a necessary nor sufficient cause of violent conflict Underlying, subnational, and diffuse environmental contributions to violent conflict Intrastate, rather than interstate (different for territorial or transboundary disputes) Fisheries, arable land, water, and deforestation are the most salient renewable resources Top down or bottom up

Some Conclusions Environmental scarcity contributes to: Migration to marginal lands and urban areas Diminished economic activity Resource capture by elites Weakening state capacity and state legitimacy Exacerbating more proximate causes of conflict (ethnic and/or income divisions) Greater risk from threat multipliers such as climate change

Exploring Pathways to Peace Along a Conflict Continuum CONFLICT PREVENTION CONFLICT POST- CONFLICT

Approaches Mayors, municipal representatives, and youth from Israel, Palestine, and Jordan join hands in the Lower Jordan River to call upon their governments to rehabilitate the river. Photo credit: Friends of the Earth Middle East

Pitfall: Forests in Nepal Run-away deforestation in 1970s led to locallymanaged resource user groups (CFUGs) Maoist insurgency erupted in 1996, inspired by widespread inequality Photo credits: STARS Foundation (top); Ingmar Zahorsky (bottom)

Forests in Nepal CFUGS are one of the country s few operating democratic organizations CFUGs can exacerbate the inequalities that gave rise to the insurgency by sidelining marginalized groups Photo credits: Sean Peoples (top); Natalio Perez (bottom)

Photo credits: UGA College of Ag (Niger), Joachim Huber (Rwanda), James Gordon (Iraq) Successful Approaches Niger Rwanda Iraq

Water in Niger History of worsening drought Potential for farmerpastoralist conflict over water Past water interventions exacerbated tensions Photo credits: Nicolas Moyer/The Humanitarian Coalition (left); International Livestock Research Institute (middle); flickr user ACEI Cheung (right)

Water in Niger Violent conflict in key areas is down, and wells have become safe havens during droughts Wells for Peace builds and manages wells via social agreements among local stakeholders Photo credits: flickr user etrenard (top); flickr user trust.org (bottom)

Mountain Gorillas in Rwanda Ongoing conflict has ravaged mountain gorillas habitats and health Gorilla tourism used to be Rwanda s 3 rd biggest source of foreign income but conflict changed that Photo credit: DFID (left); flickr user Dawaei DING (right)

Mountain Gorillas in Rwanda NGOs and regional governments collaborated to protect gorillas and manage parks with revenue from tourism fees 5% of fees are shared with local communities to improve their well-being, making poaching counterproductive Photo credit: Neil Palmer/CIAT (top); Tom Gruber (bottom)

Marshland in Iraq Cultural and environmental importance History of degradation under Saddam Hussein When the Iraq War began, marshes were only 7% of their original size Photo credits: James Gordon (left); Elliott Plack (middle); Samantha Ciaramitaro (right)

Marshland in Iraq Aid organizations rebuilt trust with local communities by addressing their most pressing needs first Photo credit: Gytis Cibulskis (top); Salim Virji (bottom) That trust creates space for longer-term conservation efforts to rebuild the marsh ecosystem

Elements of Success Community buy-in Equitable inclusion of all stakeholders Solutions integrate multiple sectors Plan for long-term sustainability

Environment in War-Torn Societies Essential ingredient, not luxury item in post-conflict Key to restoring livelihoods and jump-starting economy Restoration of services key to legitimacy of the peace Shared management structures a means to (re)building trust among former adversaries

Potential Environmental Peacebuilding Services 1. Post-crisis environmental assessments 2. Environmental capacity building and technical support 3. Environmental recovery and clean-up projects 4. Environmental diplomacy for peace building

Environmental Pathways to Peace Environment as a means to a security end Utilize logic of environmental interdependence and need for ongoing interactions to talk across lines of tension Use cooperative efforts and dialogue to manage natural resources to help address insecurities between parties in dispute Build confidence, build trust, build peace

International Education Efforts

International Education Efforts With students: - Internships/blogs - West Point - Student visits - Student site visits - Technical assistance - such as M&E - Storytelling/documentary screenings

International Education Efforts With professors/colleges: - Teaching/lectures - Curriculum development - Public meetings - Managing Our Planet series with GMU - Scholars program - Research projects - Bridging communities: - Humanitarian and development - Research and diplomacy NDU - Military and decisionmakers - CNA s military advisory board - G7 climate and conflict

We have been so used in the past to see humanitarianism, development, poverty, and climate change as distinct issues this is not a good way in looking at the problems (we must address) the intersection of issues where underdevelopment, climate change, scarcity of resources, and conflicts move countries from year to year deeper into problems. Peter Maurer, Int l Red Cross

Thank you! Roger-Mark De Souza Director of Population, Environmental Security, and Resilience Woodrow Wilson Center Washington, D.C. roger-mark.desouza@wilsoncenter.org