Climate Change Rapid Reviews, Presentations & Videos

Jul 5, 2022 | Uncategorised

Supporting materials for the ‘Climate Change: Fuelling Terror and Extremism’ report. There is increasing acknowledgment within the research and policy communities and among the security and private sectors that climate change acts as a “threat multiplier.” As such, the complexity of the links between climate change and security, the so-called climate-security nexus, has drawn specific attention to the need to better understand how climate change and terrorism interact. The overall goal of this research agenda is to delve into three possible climate change and terrorism interaction areas: 1) Climate change as an indirect contributor to terrorism; 2) Climate change as an ideological driver of terrorism; and, 3) Climate change as a means for terrorist exploitation to control or coerce populations.

About START: The National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START) is a university-based research, education and training center comprised of an international network of scholars committed to the scientific study of terrorism, responses to terrorism and related phenomena. Led by the University of Maryland, START is a Department of Homeland Security Emeritus Center of Excellence that is supported by multiple federal agencies and departments. START uses state-of-the-art theories, methods and data from the social and behavioral sciences to improve understanding of the origins, dynamics and effects of terrorism; the effectiveness and impacts of counterterrorism and CVE; and other matters of global and national security.

Visual Highlight Briefs

Climate Change and Terrorism: A Call to Action

Climate Change and Security

Climate Change and Terrorism: Key Insights

Rapid Reviews

A Climate of Terror?
Climate Change as an Indirect Contributor to Terrorism

A Climate of Terror?
Climate Change as a Potential Ideological Driver of Terrorism

A Climate of Terror?
Climate Change as a Means for Terrorist Exploitation

Video Presentations

Dr. Samuel D. Henkin (Senior Researcher & Professor, START) provides a snapshot overview of the report and scoping study titled ‘A Climate of Terror?: Approaches to the Study of Climate Change and Terrorism’.