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Environmental Science and Engineering Seminar

Wednesday, May 20, 2015
4:00pm to 5:00pm
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Arms 155 (Robert P. Sharp Lecture Hall)
Climate and Conflict
Mark A. Cane, G. Unger Vetlesen Professor Of Earth and Climate Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Columbia University,

Why do men fight?  Have changes in climate been an important influence in the past?  Will they be in the future?   Anthropologists and historians have a rich store of anecdotal evidence, but since this evidence relies heavily on simple co-occurrence it invites skepticism.   A recent, contrasting approach applies quantitative methods to investigate the connection between climate and conflict.   This discourse in this subfield is fittingly cantankerous.  Whereas historians often have plausible stories explaining the causal links from climate to conflict, the quants rarely offer more than a statistical relation. I will discuss my own work on two topics: El NiƱo and global incidence of civil conflict, and the impact of anthropogenic climate change on the civil war in Syria.

For more information, please contact Kathy Young by phone at 626-395-8732 or by email at [email protected].