2017
DOI: 10.31235/osf.io/zxtnc
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An anthropological perspective on the climate change and violence relationship

Abstract: Purpose of Review:This review explores the complex climate change-violence relationship through an anthropological lens, focusing on the interacting social and environmental conditions that constrain individual choices for violence. Evidence and methods used by anthropologists to identify violent events, as well as anthropological theories regarding why individuals choose violence, are discussed. A general social-environmental model is presented and explored through four case studies, two archaeological and tw… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Parallel to climatic conditions favoring the evolution of sociality, environmental uncertainty can also generate conflict that opposes societal formation. Over ecological timescales, for example, environmental uncertainty leads to aggression [5] as well as reproductive conflict [2][3][4], which can destabilize societies in periods of drought and low resource availability. However, over both ecological (e.g., [27-29, 33, 34]) and evolutionary timescales (e.g., [30,35]), harsh and fluctuating environments have also been shown to drive the evolution of cooperative behaviors and the formation of societies in birds S1) mapped with environment type (branches), sociality status (boxes), and sexual dimorphism index (boxes).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Parallel to climatic conditions favoring the evolution of sociality, environmental uncertainty can also generate conflict that opposes societal formation. Over ecological timescales, for example, environmental uncertainty leads to aggression [5] as well as reproductive conflict [2][3][4], which can destabilize societies in periods of drought and low resource availability. However, over both ecological (e.g., [27-29, 33, 34]) and evolutionary timescales (e.g., [30,35]), harsh and fluctuating environments have also been shown to drive the evolution of cooperative behaviors and the formation of societies in birds S1) mapped with environment type (branches), sociality status (boxes), and sexual dimorphism index (boxes).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Climate change is generating an intensification of extreme environmental conditions, including frequent and severe droughts [1] that have been associated with increased social conflict in vertebrates [2][3][4], including humans [5]. Yet, fluctuating climatic conditions have been shown to also promote cooperative behavior and the formation of vertebrate societies over both ecological and evolutionary timescales [6].…”
Section: In Briefmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is an intellectual pursuit that has not yet been taken seriously by postcolonial or political geographers. Even a closer examination of a review article on the “anthropological perspective on the climate change and violence relationship” (Shaffer, 2017), reveals that none of the “ethnographic analysis” on Darfur (Abouyoub, 2012; Kuznar & Sedlmeyer, 2005) or “East Africa” (Adano et al., 2012; Opiyo et al., 2014; Raleigh & Kniveton, 2012) – its two case studies – referred to in the article are based on long‐term and intensive fieldwork in these societies. It seems understanding subaltern subjectivities and cosmologies is irrelevant when trying to establish the ‘truth’ about climate conflict.…”
Section: The Traffic Signal Is Broken: a Postcolonial Critique Of The...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Schaffer (2017), an environmental anthropologist, begins by expanding the dimensions of conflict from armed conflict and group violence to include interpersonal (e.g., one-on-one aggression) and structural violence (e.g., violence from institutional structures, policies, and ideologies that value some segments of the population more than others) as well as cooperative behavior [32]. Anthropologists draw on both archeological (e.g., fossil records and excavations of settlements) and ethnographic (e.g., oral histories and interviews) evidence to investigate historical and current contexts [33].…”
Section: Anthropologymentioning
confidence: 99%