conflictscarcitydriven
Conflictscarcitydriven is a concept used to describe the interconnected dynamics in which resource scarcity and armed conflict reinforce one another, shaping political, economic, and humanitarian outcomes. In this view, shortages of essentials such as food, water, energy, or arable land heighten competition, drive price volatility, and heighten grievances that can fuel violence. At the same time, armed conflict disrupts production, supply chains, markets, and governance, deepening scarcity and eroding trust in institutions.
Context and mechanisms: Scarcity often arises from drought, climate stress, market shocks, or weak governance. Conflict
Indicators and patterns: rising prices, parallel or illicit markets, hoarding, aid diversion, displacement, and increased militarization
Case studies and debates: Some literature points to the Sahel, Darfur, Yemen, and parts of the Congo
Policy implications: Addressing governance gaps, ensuring fair resource allocation, protecting civilian access to essentials, and integrating