American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting 2023 – conflict and environment sessions
AGU 2023 features three in person, hybrid and remote sessions addressing the environmental consequences of armed conflicts, with a focus on earth observation.
AGU 2023 features three in person, hybrid and remote sessions addressing the environmental consequences of armed conflicts, with a focus on earth observation.
The assessment encompasses damage caused both upstream and downstream, including hydrological and geomorphic impacts, chemical contamination, waste, and ecological damage, including to protected areas.
This report focuses on two districts in Yemen which have been particularly affected by climate change and are likely to suffer further consequences in the future: Hajar district, Hadhramaut, and Tawahi district, Aden.
War in Ukraine has made it vital that we understand where its ecologically important areas are. We’ve collaborated with the Ukrainian Nature Conservation Group and Zoï Environment Network to build the most comprehensive digital map available of its most important areas for nature.
The Environmental Peacebuilding Association and the Grotius Center for International Legal Studies at Leiden University have announced that the Third International Conference on Environmental Peacebuilding will be held on June 19-21, 2024.
Initial analysis of some short and long environmental dimensions of the flood disaster in Libya, with an assessment of how the conflict has made its people more vulnerable to climate disasters.
CEOBS and the PAX Environment, Peace, and Security Project jointly received 2023’s Al-Moumin Award from the Environmental Peacebuilding Association. Accepting the award on CEOBS’ behalf, Doug Weir discusses how CEOBS works to challenge the status of the environment as a silent victim in conflicts.
Chair’s summary of a state meeting in early 2023 that reviewed the measures that militaries could take to reduce their impact on the environment,