000 02139nam a22002657a 4500
001 p5wpswnkmk2v68z7
003 SE-LIBR
005 20221110095538.0
007 cr ||| |||||
008 221109s2022 sw |||||o|||||000 ||eng|c
040 _aSipr
041 _aeng
100 1 _aValencia, Sandra C.
245 1 0 _aWFP's contributions to improving the prospects for peace in the Central American Dry Corridor /
_h[electronic resource]
_cSandra C. Valencia
260 _aSolna :
_bSIPRI,
_c2022
300 _a29 p.
500 _a"November 2022"
500 _aSIP2223
500 _aThis report explores the linkages between climate change, food security and conflict in the Central American Dry Corridor region. Specifically, the report analyses how climatic shocks and stresses affect food security and the risk of conflict in the Dry Corridor, through case studies of Guatemala and Honduras. In addition, the research analyses if, and how, the World Food Programme’s (WFP) Food for Assets programmes, which seek to increase resilience, are mitigating conflict risk, and WFP’s role in longer-term peacebuilding efforts against the backdrop of negative climate trends. The research was conducted in a selection of WFP’s intended beneficiary communities considered part of the Dry Corridor in the departments of Chiquimula and Zacapa in Guatemala and in the departments of La Paz and Santa Barbara in Honduras. Two theories of change are proposed for how WFP can improve the prospects for peace and reduce conflict sensitivity risks through its Food for Assets Resilience programming in the Dry Corridor: one related to land tenure and a second related to water governance.?The research was part of a wider knowledge partnership between SIPRI and WFP. The partnership aimed to inform WFP’s potential contributions to improving the prospects for peace and how to address these through WFP’s programming.
650 _aclimate change
_xclimate
_xcollect resolution
651 4 _aCentral America
_xpeacebuilding
_xfood
_xpopulation
_xWFP
710 2 _aSIPRI
856 4 0 _uhttps://doi.org/10.55163/AEFI7913
942 _cEMON
999 _c80237
_d80237