Building Community Resilience

Development, poverty reduction and sustainable management of the environment ultimately depend on social stability and peace. Yet, since the end of the Cold War, conflict is increasingly fought within, rather than between nations, and is killing and displacing civilians as never before.

Likewise, the frequency and impacts of disasters are on the rise, driven in part by climate change.

The poor and the marginalized are disproportionately affected by conflicts and disasters, and are the least equipped to recover. Evidence is emerging that appropriate management of ecosystems and natural resources can help reduce the vulnerability of human communities. Conversely, resource mismanagement may lead to degradation and scarcity, as well as inequitable access to resources and benefit sharing from their use, adding to the growing threats of conflict and disaster.

IUCN is commited to help build the resilience of human communities in rural areas to natural disasters and the impacts of climate change.

In 2000, IUCN and IISD convened an international Task Force of leading experts to assess the linkages between environment and security. It concluded that resource degradation and natural disasters affect the lives and livelihoods of millions of poor people around the world, especially those in indigenous and traditional communities. Loss of livelihoods, in turn, leads to social tension, migration and settlement in inappropriate areas, and often to conflict. Hence investments aimed at environmental conservation and the promotion of sustainable and equitable use of natural resources may be significant factors in mitigating disaster risk, reducing social tensions and avoiding conflicts that cause human misery and environmental degradation.

See IUCN’s Working Group on Environment and Security

Poverty and the Climate Crisis: Listen to Maria Blair of the Rockefeller Foundation
  • Maria Blair, Associate Vice President of the Rockefeller Foundation