Climate & Environment

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Condemned to Repeat the Past: Thirty Years of Understanding Ignored

posted by James Morton

Darfur has suffered more than most from the international community’s attention deficit disorder. It only commands that attention at times of crisis: the sahel drought of the 1968 to 1970, the Band Aid famine of 1984/5 and the current conflict. As each crisis recedes, important lessons are forgotten and the effort spent learning [...]

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Monday, April 21st, 2008

Water under the Desert: Blessing or Curse?

posted by admin

Posted on behalf of Sarah Barga
Alex de Waal makes a compelling argument for the possibility of the underground lake found in the northern part of Darfur as having negative effects. It is easy to look at the situation at arms length, or from the outside and think that the water reserves would have positive impact, [...]

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Friday, March 7th, 2008

Demystifying State and Property Rights on Land

posted by admin

Posted on behalf of Abdal Basit Saeed
In the Sudanese context of prolonged conflict, mobility of pastoral groups into the transitional areas such as South Kordofan and Blue Nile and the drive for compensation for the dispossession of lands where petroleum is found, rural land is being gradually and consistently transformed from communal use to private [...]

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Thursday, November 8th, 2007

Listening to Sudanese Voices on Darfur

posted by Alex de Waal

It goes without saying that Sudanese scholars are the true experts on Darfur’s crisis. The short book edited by Abdel Ghaffar Mohammed Ahmed and Leif Manger, Understanding the Crisis in Darfur: Listening to Sudanese Voices, is an essential resource for those wishing to understand how Sudanese see the conflict and the possible resolution to it.

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Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Cause and Effect

posted by Thomas Homer-Dixon

(posted on behalf of Thomas Homer-Dixon )

What does it mean when we say that one factor is more or less important than another in identifying the causes of social conflict? Thomas Homer-Dixon writes here on causality in complex systems, in response to Alex de Waal’s earlier post Is Climate Change the Culprit for Darfur? and to Declan Butler’s June 28th Nature article Darfur’s climate roots challenged. Thomas Homer-Dixon holds the George Ignatieff Chair of Peace and Conflict Studies at the Trudeau Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at University College, University of Toronto. [...]

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Thursday, July 26th, 2007

Darfur’s New-Found Water Reserves: Blessing or Curse?

posted by Alex de Waal

The basic rule of water supply in semi-arid lands is that whoever controls the water, controls the people. New water resources provide as many perils as hopes depending on the politics of how the water is controlled.
The recent discovery of a vast underground lake in the far north of Darfur has been acclaimed by commentators [...]

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Monday, June 25th, 2007

Is Climate Change the Culprit for Darfur?

posted by Alex de Waal

Is climate change the culprit for the disaster in Darfur? The answer is not simple. In this posting I argue that climatic and environmental factors have compelled Darfurians to adapt their livelihoods and migrate southwards. These changes have been going on for centuries, but over the last thirty years, they have occurred at a faster [...]

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