Resource Conflict in Vulnerable Environments: Three Models Applied to Darfur
Abstract
A recurring argument in the global debate is that climate deteriora-
tion is likely to make social conflicts over dwindling natural resources
more common in the future. In this paper, we present a modelling
framework featuring three potential mechanisms for how the alloca-
tion and dynamics of scarce renewable resources like land might cause
social conflict in vulnerable environments. The rst model shows how
decreasing resources make cooperative trade between two groups col-
lapse. The second mechanism introduces a Malthusian subsistence
level below which disenfranchised members of one community start
to prey on the resources of another community in an appropriative
coflict-setting. The third scenario explores how the long-run dynam-
ics of resources and population levels interact to cause cycles of stag-
nation and recovery. Predictions from the models are then applied to
the ongoing conflict in the Darfur region of Sudan. Our analysis sug-
gests that e¤ective resources per capita in the region appear to have
declined by about 5/6 since the 1970s, which at least partially explains
the observed disintegration of markets, the recent intensity of conflicts,
and the current depopulation of large parts of Darfur.
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Date
2008-10-23Author
Olsson, Ola
Keywords
Market integration
resource conflict
vulnerable environments
appropriative coflict
long-run resource and population dynamics
Darfur
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
325
Language
eng