Alda, Erik2016-03-032016-03-032014-03https://hdl.handle.net/10986/23838Section one of the papers provides a brief overview of the relationship between the Sahel region of Africa and climate variability trends and predictions, ultimately posing the primary research question of the study: Is the Sahel region more likely to have a higher probability of conflict and migration as a result of climate change and climate change-related events? In section two, research and analysis aim to identify causal paths between climate change, migration, and conflict via structural equation modeling focusing on recent climate change trends in the Africa and Sahel regions, particularly changes in temperature and rainfall, and analyzing the consequences of this climate variabil¬ity, namely migration and conflict. Section three brings the aspect of youth into the analysis, arguing that youth living in the rural Sahel region will likely find themselves particularly vulnerable to in¬creased climate change and variability, which will have direct and indirect implications on the security and livelihoods of these individuals. The paper explores the past, current and predicted issues faced by rural Sahel youth affected by the impacts of climate change, such as chronic unemployment and engagement in the illicit sector due to rural to urban migration from regions affected by drought, desertification and resource scarcity. The final section of the paper offers policy recommen¬dations for addressing negative climate-change related consequences through two key paths of intervention: (i) climate change adaptation measures and (ii) conflict and crime prevention measures.en-USCC BY 3.0 IGOACCESS TO EMPLOYMENTIMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGEJOBSCIVIL CONFLICTFINANCIAL SERVICESECONOMIC GROWTHLOCAL CAPACITYTEMPERATUREENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATIONREGIONAL STRATEGYLIVESTOCK SYSTEMSMIGRATION POLICYINCOMERAINFALL PATTERNSAGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIONTERRORISTEMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIESCLIMATE CHANGE IMPLICATIONSLOCAL GOVERNMENTSCLIMATE CHANGE CONSEQUENCESGOOD GOVERNANCELIFE SKILLSNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTSURFACE WATERLEGAL STATUSGOVERNMENT CAPACITYEVAPOTRANSPIRATIONTECHNICAL SKILLSMODELSPUBLICATIONSCLIMATE-RELATED DISASTERCONSEQUENCES OF CLIMATE CHANGESOCIAL PROGRAMSVULNERABILITYSCARCITIESEXTREME WEATHERCLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION MEASURESINEQUITIESKNOWLEDGEINTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGEARMED CONFLICTLABOR MARKETURBAN MIGRATIONHUMAN SECURITYDISEASESPER CAPITA INCOMETROPICSTRAININGDRUG TRAFFICKINGFORCED MIGRATIONIMPLICATIONS OF CLIMATE CHANGEPOPULATION GROWTHREGIONAL CLIMATEFLOODSCAPACITYAVERAGE RAINFALLDEMOCRACYMIGRATIONNATURAL DISASTERSRAINFALLNUMBER OF MIGRANTSLAND DEGRADATIONDISASTERSPOPULATION MIGRATIONSEASONAL RAINFALLENVIRONMENTAL CHANGEMIGRANTSNATURAL RESOURCESPRECIPITATIONUNEPHOUSEHOLD ASSETSFINANCEIMPACT OF CLIMATECLIMATE TRENDSPROGRESSCLIMATE VARIABILITYMIGRATION FLOWSUNEMPLOYMENTFOOD SECURITYCLIMATE-CHANGEPOLICIESENVIRONMENTAL POLICYCLIMATE CHANGEIPCCSCIENCEDROUGHTIMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGEEXTREME EVENTSCLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTSRAPID POPULATION GROWTHURBAN CENTERSCLIMATECLIMATE RELATED DISASTERSWORKSHOPPUSH FACTORPOPULATION DENSITYURBAN AREASCLIMATE RISKCOLORSSOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF CLIMATE CHANGEINCREASE IN TEMPERATURESOCIAL DIMENSIONSINSTITUTIONAL CAPACITYCLIMATE CHANGESPOPULATIONSMARKETSECURITY THREATMALARIAWEATHER PATTERNSPOLICYLIFESTYLESCENTURY TEMPERATURESRISK FACTORSEVOLUTION OF CLIMATE CHANGEMINORITYCLIMATIC CHANGEDESERTIFICATIONWARSLOCAL COMMUNITIESWARCHRONIC UNEMPLOYMENTASYLUMAMOUNT OF RAINFALLCLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATIONRURAL AREASINDIGENOUS PEOPLESTEMPERATURESYOUNG PEOPLERAINPOPULATIONMEAN TEMPERATURECIVIL WARSCARCE RESOURCESEXTREME WEATHER EVENTSPOPULATION DATARESILIENCE TO CLIMATE CHANGEHUMAN SETTLEMENTSPREVENTION STRATEGIESPOPULATION INCREASESPEACEPOLITICAL INSTABILITYECONOMIC CONDITIONSCLIMATE IMPLICATIONSNEGATIVE IMPACTSDEVELOPMENT POLICYHUMAN DEVELOPMENTRising Tempers, Rising TemperaturesReportWorld BankA Look at Climate Change, Migration and Conflict and the Implications for Youth in the Sahel Region10.1596/23838