Ongoing debates in the academic community and in the public policy arena continue without clear resolution about the significance of global climate change for the risk of increased conflict. SubSaharan Africa is generally agreed to be the region most vulnerable to such climate impacts. Using a large database of conflict events and detailed climatological data covering the period 1980-2012, we apply a multilevel modeling technique that allows for a more nuanced understanding of a climate-conflict link than has been seen heretofore. In the aggregate, high temperature extremes are associated with more conflict; however, different types of conflict and different subregions do not show consistent relationship with temperature deviations. Precipitation deviations, both high and low, are generally not significant. The location and timing of violence are influenced less by climate anomalies (temperature or precipitation variations from normal) than by key political, economic, and geographic factors. We find important distinctions in the relationship between temperature extremes and conflict by using multiple methods of analysis and by exploiting our time-series crosssectional dataset for disaggregated analyses.climate variability | multilevel modeling | disaggregated spatial analysis | regional contexts | types of violence indicators C ontinued public and academic interest in the topic of global climate change consequences for political instability and the risk of conflict has generated a growing but inconclusive literature, especially about the effects in sub-Saharan Africa. Claims that climate change contributes to conflict have been plentiful since Miguel et al. (1) found that negative deviations of annual precipitation in sub-Saharan African countries reduce national economic growth, and thus indirectly lead to higher risk of civil war. The recent fifth assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change highlights the severely damaging effects of predicted climatic disturbances for vulnerable societies around the world (2). Multiple recent analyses provide support for the general position that climate change has "strong causal" influences on conflict (3, 4), although the authors do not elaborate on nor test the causal mechanisms (also refs. 5 and 6).Many existing statistical studies are based on data aggregated to large geographic units such as countries, using crude climate indicators and generalized high-level conflict measures. Some studies indicate positive relationships between climate extremes and violence at the large scale (7-9), whereas contrasting work reports a lack of significant effects (10-12). Using fine-resolution spatial scales, other researchers find weak or no climate-conflict association; they conclude that the relationship is complex and depends on the social characteristics of the regional settings (13-15), or that the relationship is nonlinear across multiple regions and livelihood zones (16). In direct contrast to the scarcity narrative, some research suggests that an abundance of wa...