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Resource war

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Aresource waris a type ofwarcaused by conflict overresources.In a resource war, there is typically a nation or group that controls the resource and an aggressor that wishes to seize control over said resource. This power dynamic between nations has been a significant underlying factor in conflicts since the late 19th century.[1]Following the rise ofindustrialization,the amount of raw materials an industrialized nation uses to sustain its activities is heightened.[2]

History

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Chincha Islands War

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Illustration of the Chincha Islands of Peru, circa 1859

One of the most prolific examples of resource war in history is the conflict over Chincha Islandguanoin the late 19th century. TheChincha IslandsofPeruare situated off of the southern coast of Peru, where many seabirds were known to roost and prey on fish brought there by the currents of thePacific Ocean.[3]The guano of these seabirds is incredibly dense in nutrients and became a sought-after resource as afertilizer.[4]Soil that was nutrient rich allowed for higher crop yields, which subsequently translated to better sustenance of the population and overall improved economic performance. Known colloquially as "white gold", guano from the Chincha Islands began to catch the interest ofSpain,theUnited Kingdom,theUnited States,and other industrial powers at the time.[5]

The international interest for that resource resulting in a number of conflicts including theChincha Islands Warbetween Spain and Peru and theWar of the Pacificbetween Chile, Bolivia, and Peru.[6]Although the primary inciting force of the conflict originated over possession of the nutrient-rich guano, Spain also attempted to exercise prior colonial control over Peru during its aggressions during this conflict. The Chincha Islands guano became a resource of imperialism with foreign nations inciting conflict and establishing dominion over it. In 1856, United States PresidentFranklin Piercepassed theGuano Islands Actwith the exclusive purpose of addressing American scarcity over guano.[7]Under the Guano Islands Act, any piece of uninhabited land that harbors a guano deposit could be claimed as a territory of the United States to extract the resource.[8]The legislation acted as a workaround for the United States to access Peruvian seabird guano since direct trade was not an option because of a treaty between Peru and the United Kingdom.[6]

Perspectives

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Geopolitical

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Under thegeopoliticallens for interpreting resource wars, the main rationale behind resource conflict is strategic. It assumes that control over the resource provides a particular advantage to that nation and interprets hostile attempts to take over the resource as a means to acquire that advantage for themselves. Resources that are deemed strategic shift over time and pertain to what is required for economic expansion or success at the time. Examples of this include timber during the seventeenth century for naval development oroilduring the twentieth century onward for enabling military technology and transportation.[9]

Environmental security

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Dr. Thomas Homer-Dixon at an NDP convention in British Columbia, circa 2007

Also known as the environmental scarcity or political economy, the environmental security perspective interprets resource conflict as a response to resourcescarcity.A notable proponent of the environmental security perspective is Dr.Thomas Homer-Dixon,a Canadian political scientist and professor at the University of Waterloo. The work of Homer-Dixon focuses on two different phenomena regarding the effect of resources on violent conflict: resource scarcity and resource abundance. Under the environmental security perspective, resource scarcity perpetuates conflict by inciting pressures on a society that is dealing with resource deprivation. According to Homer-Dixon, populations struggling with resource scarcity are also impacted by overpopulation and inequitableresource allocation.[10]Overpopulation and inequitable resource allocation can make resource scarcity even more pronounced, creating a cyclical instability in the society.[10]

Conversely, countries with natural resource abundance are impacted in a different way. Countries that are wealthy in resources have been shown to have disproportionate economic growth, less democracy, and overall insufficient development outcomes.[11]This permeates from an overdependence on their resource from an economic standpoint, where authoritarian traits may begin to take effect.[10]This creates pressure on the citizens as a whole due to undermined governance of the nation and volatile economic state if the resource fluctuates heavily in price.[12]This phenomenon is known as theresource curse.

Conflict resources

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Conflict resources arenatural resourcesextracted in aconflict zoneand sold to perpetuate the fighting.[13]There is both statistical and anecdotal evidence that the presence of precious commodities can prolong conflicts (a "resource curse").[14][15][16]An unfortunate irony is that many countries rich in minerals are impoverished in terms of their capacity for governance. Conflict, corruption and bribery may be seen as the typical costs of doing business.[17]The extraction and sale ofblood diamonds,also known as "conflict diamonds", is a better-known phenomenon which occurs under virtually identical conditions.Petroleumcan also be a conflict resource. Other commodities are also involved in financing conflict.

History

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The concept of "conflict resource", or "conflictcommodity"emerged in the late 1990s, initially in relation to the"blood diamonds"that were financing rebellions inAngolaandSierra Leone.[18]Then "conflict timber" financed hostilities inCambodiaandLiberia.[19]

Conventions

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The concept was first officially discussed by theUN General Assemblyin the context of 'conflict diamonds':[20]TheUN Security Councilhas since referred to conflict resources in several resolutions, particularly resolutions 1533 and I698.97.[21]

Since 1996 theBonn International Center for Conversionhas trackedresource governanceandconflict intensityby country.[22]Aside fromfossil fuels,metals, diamonds, and timber it tracks thegovernanceof otherprimary goodsthat might fund conflicts, including:poppy seedsandtalc(Afghanistan),rubber(Côte d'Ivoire),cotton(Zambia), andcocoa(Indonesia).

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Several countries and organizations, including theUnited States,European Union,andOECDhave designated tantalum, tin, tungsten, and gold connected to conflict in the DRC asconflict mineralsandlegally require companies to report trade or use of conflict mineralsas a way to reduce incentives for armed groups to extract and fight over the minerals.

Supporting external conflicts

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In the 2020s, the concept of conflict minerals was extended to those mined to support conflicts in parts of the world other than where the mining takes place. TheWagner Grouphas been granted mining rights in theCentral African Republicin return for securing the continuity of the government. This "blood gold" is then sold to support Russia in theRusso-Ukrainian War.[23]Wagner also has gold-related operations in Mali and Sudan.[24]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Acemoglu, D.; Golosov, M.; Tsyvinski, A.; Yared, P. (2012-01-06)."A Dynamic Theory of Resource Wars".The Quarterly Journal of Economics.127(1): 283–331.doi:10.1093/qje/qjr048.hdl:1721.1/70960.ISSN0033-5533.
  2. ^Bakeless, John (1921).The Economic Causes of Modern War: A Study of the Period: 1878-1918.New York: Moffat, Yard, and Company.
  3. ^"The Hard Workers of the Peruvian Guano (The Chincha Islands), 2014".Agence VU'.Retrieved2022-07-02.
  4. ^Durfee, Nell (2018-04-27)."Holy Crap! A Trip to the World's Largest Guano-Producing Islands".Audubon.Retrieved2022-07-02.
  5. ^Mancini, Mark (2015-08-12)."How an Old Bird Poop Law Can Help You Claim an Island".Mental Floss.Retrieved2022-07-02.
  6. ^abBrazeau, Mark (2018-04-04)."Remember the Guano Wars".The Breakthrough Institute.Retrieved2022-07-02.
  7. ^Underhill, Kevin (2014-07-08)."The Guano Islands Act".Washington Post.ISSN0190-8286.Retrieved2022-07-02.
  8. ^Cornell Law School."48 U.S. COde Chapter 8- GUANO ISLANDS".Legal Information Institute.
  9. ^Le Billon, Philippe (2007)."Geographies of War: Perspectives on 'Resource Wars'".Geography Compass.1(2): 163–182.Bibcode:2007GComp...1..163L.doi:10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00010.x– via Wiley.
  10. ^abcHomer-Dixon, Thomas (1994). "Environmental Scarcities and Violent Conflict: Evidence from Cases".International Security.19(1): 5–40.doi:10.2307/2539147.hdl:10535/2855.JSTOR2539147.S2CID154212598.
  11. ^Smith, Benjamin; Waldner, David (2021-04-30).Rethinking the Resource Curse(1 ed.). Cambridge University Press.doi:10.1017/9781108776837.ISBN978-1-108-77683-7.S2CID233539488.
  12. ^Norman, Catherine S. (2009)."Rule of Law and the Resource Curse: Abundance Versus Intensity".Environmental and Resource Economics.43(2): 183–207.Bibcode:2009EnREc..43..183N.doi:10.1007/s10640-008-9231-y.ISSN0924-6460.S2CID59417490.
  13. ^p.8, Conflict and Development: Peacebuilding and Post-conflict Resolution; Sixth Report of Session 2005–06, Great Britain: Parliament: House of Commons: International Development Committee, The Stationery Office, 2006
  14. ^Philippe Le Billon, "Fuelling War: Natural Resources and Armed Conflicts", Adelphi Paper 373, IISS & Routledge, 2006.
  15. ^Michael Ross, "How Do Natural Resources Influence Civil War? Evidence from Thirteen Cases", International Organization, 2004.
  16. ^James Fearon and David lotinakin "Ethnicity, Insurgency, and Civil War"American Political Science Review,2003.
  17. ^Agbiboa, Daniel Egiegba (2011-11-03)."Between Corruption and Development: The Political Economy of State Robbery in Nigeria".Journal of Business Ethics.108(3): 325–345.doi:10.1007/s10551-011-1093-5.ISSN0167-4544.S2CID154968679.
  18. ^"'Blood diamonds' crackdown deal ".BBC News.28 June 2000.Retrieved8 October2020.Peter Hain:without blood diamonds, the war in Sierra Leone could not be financed... In the face of enormous suffering caused by the diamond-fuelled wars in Sierra Leone, Angola and theDemocratic Republic of Congo,we have a duty to ensure that we are doing as much as we can.
  19. ^"Liberian 'conflict' timber faces trade ban".GreenpeaceUK. 7 May 2003. Archived fromthe originalon 20 May 2011.Retrieved8 October2020.
  20. ^UNGA Resolution 55/56 (2001)Archived2006-11-08 at theWayback Machine
  21. ^Cassill, Deby L. (2014)."What can ants tell us about corporate social responsibility?".Handbook of Research on Marketing and Corporate Social Responsibility:269–287.doi:10.4337/9781783476091.00023.ISBN9781783476091.
  22. ^Accessible through "the BICC Resource Conflict Monitor".Archived fromthe originalon 2011-01-22.Retrieved2010-06-05.
  23. ^Scott Detrow; Emma Klein; Tinbete Ermyas (December 27, 2023)."How 'blood gold' from Africa is funding Russia's war on Ukraine".NPR.
  24. ^"The Blood Gold Report".RetrievedMarch 2,2024.