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Resilience at the periphery: Insurgency,agency and social-ecological change under armed conflict
Institution:2. Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Via di Vigna Murata, 605, 00143 Roma, Italy;3. C.N.R.- Istituto di Geologia Ambientale e Geoingegneria (IGAG), Area della Ricerca di Roma1 - Montelibretti, Via Salaria Km 29, 300 Monterotondo Roma, Italy;4. Sapienza- Università di Roma, Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5 00185 Roma, Italy;5. Regione Lazio- Area Difesa del Suolo- Servizio Geologico, viale del Tintoretto, 432, 00142 Roma, Italy;6. Geologia-Prospezioni geofisiche-Topografia, Roma, Italy
Abstract:Armed conflict has played an increasingly important role in the transformation of key social and environmental systems at multiple spatial and temporal scales. Accelerated resource flows and environmental change dynamics intersect with conflict processes in ways that are substantial and yet inadequately understood. Drawing on research along the Pakistani border in eastern Afghanistan’s embattled province of Nangarhar, we employ a coupled systems approach for understanding the ways in which social-ecological processes shape and are shaped by armed conflict. Based on field surveys, geospatial analysis of land and forest change, and participatory research among local communities, government agencies and military actors, we identify several causal processes linking conflict and dynamics of social-ecological change in the context of multiscalar geopolitical processes. We focus attention on four inter-related elements: (1) transitional modes of resource governance relating to armed militia groups and state intervention, (2) forest changes related to illegal logging and trade networks, (3) the erosion of upper-montane rangelands through encroachment and changing pastoral responses to conflict, and (4) significant land use changes in the agricultural sector toward the cultivation of opium poppy. Our research highlights the importance of center-periphery relations, the problematic nature of local agency, and the ways in which local social-ecological elements—here, particularly, timber and opium—become political objects within competing narratives of (in)security and ongoing state formation.
Keywords:Conflict  Social-ecological systems  Resilience  Afghanistan  Environmental change
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