Let Them Eat Cake: Marginal Effects of the El Niño Southern Oscillation on Intra-State Conflict

Description
There is growing public concern about the implications of climate change for natural processes, such as the melting of ice at the poles, but less clear are the implications for food production. Famine and conflict have a long and complicated

There is growing public concern about the implications of climate change for natural processes, such as the melting of ice at the poles, but less clear are the implications for food production. Famine and conflict have a long and complicated history, made increasingly complicated by the intricate global food system. In this paper, I explore the effect of increasingly severe El Niño Southern Oscillation cycles on conflict in an effort to determine how abnormal climate patterns affect food security and, indirectly, conflict. I use a non-linear probit model to analyze the relationship between several binary conflict variables and food supply.

Downloads

One or more components are restricted to ASU affiliates. Please sign in to view the rest.
Restrictions Statement

Barrett Honors College theses and creative projects are restricted to ASU community members.

Details

Contributors
Date Created
2016-12
Topical Subject
Resource Type
Language
  • eng
Additional Information
English
Series
  • Academic Year 2016-2017
Extent
  • 23 pages