Known for its innovative research bridging policy and academic spheres, the Robert Strauss Center this year won the esteemed Special Achievements in GIS (SAG) Award for its work mapping security risks related to climate change. The Strauss Center uses Esri’s geographic information systems (GIS) technology as part of its Climate Change and African Political Stability (CCAPS) program to analyze how communities are vulnerable to climate change, understand links between climate change and conflict, and assess the effectiveness of targeting international responses.
The Strauss Center’s CCAPS Mapping Tool combines climate, conflict, governance, and aid data to analyze how climate change impacts and responses intersect in Africa. The mapping tool was one of 175 sites chosen worldwide from over 100,000 nominees for the award. The tool’s policy applications range from assessing how emerging conflict patterns could exacerbate climate-induced insecurity to examining whether development aid targets areas with the greatest climate risks.
This fall, CCAPS also released a host of new research, with innovative findings in:
Further, new methodologies developed by CCAPS researchers are also increasingly being applied by organizations in the field. A recent report by the Centre for Development Finance in India, entitled Climate Finance at the Local Level ““ The Case of Odisha, utilized CCAPS’ methodology for tracking climate aid to help develop aid strategies that would assist Indian central and state governments in implementing State Action Plans on Climate Change. This CCAPS methodology identifies and measures how much of a particular development aid project contributes to adaptation and can thus be labeled “climate aid.” The CDF case study of climate change financing in Odisha is just one example of how the innovative CCAPS methodology“”originally developed for Africa””can potentially be used to efficiently plan for future climate change adaptation in many parts of the world.
Strauss Center Distinguished Scholar Joshua Busby has been named the recipient of the 2026 Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving the World Order for scholarship presented in his 2022 book, "States and Nature: The Effects of Climate Change on Security." His work was based, in part, on his studies within Strauss Center programs on Complex Emergencies and Political Instability in Asia...
On April 21, Ashley Moran, director of the Strauss Center's State Fragility Initiative, spoke at an event briefing NATO on civil society working group recommendations on expanding NATO’s work to address the security risks from climate and environmental stress. The April 21 event was organized by NATO’s Policy Planning Unit and Emerging Security Challenges Division. It included remarks by several...
Professor Joshua Busby, Associate Professor of Public Affairs at the LBJ School and Strauss Center Distinguished Scholar, recently co-authored a piece for the World Economic Forum titled “The US needs partners to tackle the security risks of climate change.” The article begins by presenting three main arguments: that climate change imposes increasingly hazardous risks to “stability and security”; that the Biden...