“…Vivekananda et al (2014Vivekananda et al ( & 2019 call this a "climate-fragility-conflict trap". A final point to note here is that, across the Lake Chad region, climate and conflict are tied together in a vicious circle where conflict undermines the capacity to cope with climatic events, with climate making it harder to address conflicts and promote peace (Nagarajan, 2018;Singh, 2022) Switching to how the nexus has evolved with ongoing increase in regional climatic stress where temperatures are rising 1.5 times faster than the global average, more recent studies reveal: heightened rate of forced migration (UNHCR, 2016;Akubor, 2017;IOM, 2019;Kamta et al, 2021;Lamarche, 2022;Tower, 2022); more land use changes (Nwilo et al, 2019;Nwilo et al, 2020); and hike in food prices (Blankespoor, 2020;Pham-Duc et al, 2020;Olowoyeye & Kanwar, 2022). Multiple conflict types (e.g., gender-based violence and violence against children) are happening simultaneously with communal battles and land violence increasing by more than 50% since the emergence of Boko Haram conflict in 2009 (Cole, 2016;Brechenmacher, 2019; UNDP, 2022; Escola de Cultura de Pau, 2023).…”