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Volume 5 Issue 10, October 2022

Complexities of water and conflict

Popular conceptions of ‘water wars’ can lead to fears that water scarcity and water demand invariably lead to conflict over water resources. Rulli and colleagues examine a range of biophysical factors interconnecting with the socio-political context of the Lake Chad region of Africa and find that water does not lead directly to armed conflict but that it can increase complex tensions to prolong or escalate violence.

See Galli et al.

Image: Kypros/Moment/Getty. Cover Design: Valentina Monaco.

Editorial

  • As the pace of global change quickens, traditional means of data collection may fall short in monitoring its impacts. To ensure a sustainable future, we need all hands on deck in observing our changing planet.

    Editorial

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Comment & Opinion

  • Flooding, already the largest hazard facing humankind, is becoming more frequent and affecting more people. Adapting to flooding must consider more than just water to encapsulate the effects of sediment movement, re-imagine flooding through a sociogeomorphic lens and expand approaches to knowing about floods.

    • Jim Best
    • Peter Ashmore
    • Stephen E. Darby
    Comment
  • Citizen science efforts are instrumental in monitoring our progress towards the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Dilek Fraisl, Research Scholar at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, and Omar Seidu, Director of Social and Demographic Statistics and the SDGs Coordinator at the Ghana Statistical Service, discuss how Ghana successfully integrated citizen science data into its official monitoring of marine plastic debris.

    • Stephanie M. Olen
    Q&A
  • Margot Wallström, former European Commissioner for the Environment and former Foreign Secretary of Sweden, led an international expert panel at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute to study the intertwined risks of global environmental crises and conflict.

    • Lisa Palmer
    Q&A
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News & Views

  • There are no silver bullet chemistries for batteries — but zinc technology, with its safety, cost and environmental advantages, has received renewed interest as a choice for sustainability. Now, direct imaging sheds light on the charge carrier, clearing a major barrier to understanding and upgrading this energy system.

    • Fei Wang
    • Kang Xu
    • Chunsheng Wang
    News & Views
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Research Briefings

  • Hydrological modelling makes it possible to derive measures of water availability that are representative of its importance for human sustenance. This approach, and focusing on water utilization processes rather than simplifying them into environmental factors, helps identify new quantitative evidence of interconnections between conflict, society and the environment.

    Research Briefing
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Research

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