Publications by Year

<embed>
Copy and paste this code to your website.

Publications by Authors

Exploring the worldwide impact of COVID-19 on conflict risk under climate change

Citation:

Xie, X. ; Hao, M. ; Ding, F. ; Ide, T. ; Helman, D. ; Scheffran, J. ; Wang, Q. ; Qian, Y. ; Chen, S. ; Wu, J. ; et al. Exploring The Worldwide Impact Of Covid-19 On Conflict Risk Under Climate Change. Heliyon 2023, 9, e17182.

Abstract:

Understand whether and how the COVID-19 pandemic affects the risk of different types of conflict worldwide in the context of climate change.
Methodology
Based on the database of armed conflict, COVID-19, detailed climate, and non-climate data covering the period 2020–2021, we applied Structural Equation Modeling specifically to reorganize the links between climate, COVID-19, and conflict risk. Moreover, we used the Boosted Regression Tree method to simulate conflict risk under the influence of multiple factors.
Findings
The transmission risk of COVID-19 seems to decrease as the temperature rises. Additionally, COVID-19 has a substantial worldwide impact on conflict risk, albeit regional and conflict risk variations exist. Moreover, when testing a one-month lagged effect, we find consistency across regions, indicating a positive influence of COVID-19 on demonstrations (protests and riots) and a negative relationship with non-state and violent conflict risk.
Conclusion
COVID-19 has a complex effect on conflict risk worldwide under climate change.
Implications
Laying the theoretical foundation of how COVID-19 affects conflict risk and providing some inspiration for the implementation of relevant policies.

Publisher's Version