Nadia Ali
PhD Researcher
showfor a more peaceful world
The divergence of perspectives among individuals regarding the accessibility, regulation, utilisation and exploitation of renewable and non-renewable natural resources, such as water, land, minerals or grazing land, provides a foundation for the emergence of social conflicts that can potentially escalate into violent conflicts.
Furthermore, many marginalised and underprivileged people across the globe are facing rising resource shortages due to climate change. Large-scale infrastructure, economic growth and nature conservation initiatives promise a better future. At the same time, these very initiatives may also obstruct some people's access to resources and jeopardise their local livelihood strategies. Climate change and long-term development strategies promote socio-ecological transformation processes that are fraught with social and political conflict.
bicc seeks to establish an applied understanding of sustainability that addresses the relationship between violent conflict and social inequality by tackling the challenges presented by the climate crisis, food insecurity, land-use change and the control of access to land.
running
running
closed
running
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed