ARI’s Environmental Politics Program seeks to place the environment at the heart of research, policy, and activism in MENA. We approach the environment not simply as a set of natural resources, but also as a shared public space, a domain of public health, and an arena of political economy. For us, environmentalism is not a “technical” issue, but rather inseparable from MENA’s broader political and economic discussions, requiring regular and engaged dialogue between different constituencies and disciplines and an amplification of the voices of those most affected by environmental damage.
The program brings together a network of scholars, practitioners, and activists to:
- create a community of practice to share new ways of thinking about environmental conditions, challenges, and potentials;
- foster trans-regional linkages among activists and movements advocating for environmental justice;
- showcase the experiences of local communities contending with environmental injustices; and
- identify critical locations and margins of manoeuvre for environmental change.
Area 1: Understanding and supporting environmental activism in MENA
There is a growing and increasingly vibrant activism in MENA around environmental issues. From protests over land use in Egypt, to garbage handling in Lebanon, to water mismanagement in Basra, to phosphate pollution and toxic landfills in Tunisia, we have witnessed the rise of ad-hoc environmental activism campaigns as well as more organized social movements born out of environmental harms. Civil society organizations are also more active on the environment, their members campaigning at home and representing the region more regularly and visibly at international meetings on environmental causes. However, environmental activism has yet to be studied in the context of a broader process of social contestation seeking to change the region’s political and economic order. ARI works to highlight the various forms, demands, and expressions of environmental activism, understand its modes of organization and current needs, and document State responses. A priority is to link and strengthen networks across social movements and countries, as well as between activists and researchers.
Area 2: Analyzing national-level governance structures and advocating for change
The institutional and political landscape that governs national-level decisions on the environment in MENA is a black box. Budget lines, functions, competencies, and regulatory powers on issues that affect the environment are fuzzy and opaque. ARI is mapping and analyzing governance structures and the politics surrounding them to better elaborate recommendations that would address environmental justice concerns. Our work also critically examines the role of international institutions (the European Union, World Bank, UN agencies, regional development banks) in setting environmental policies in the region, in defining what qualifies as environmental hazard or crisis, and in integrating the ubiquitous discourse on environmental into traditional development and infrastructure projects.
Area 3: Highlighting and promoting local initiatives
Critical questions of environmental policy are experienced at the local level. Very often, the local is also the stage for responses and solutions to global environmental issues. From a grassroots angle, we see increasing use of adaptation and mitigation strategies to address the myriad of social, economic, urban, and environmental problems facing local communities. In Morocco, some local communities are reverting to ancestral ways of water sharing to deal with increasing shortages and address water injustices. In Tunisia, local activists are pushing for new concepts about food sovereignty and seeking to put on the agenda the notion of sustainable agriculture. Seen through a municipal politics lens, recent decentralization processes around the world have provided new tools and capabilities for environmental action at the subnational level. Local governments, especially municipalities — historically an overlooked site of change — are increasingly taking on new regulatory powers, moving into new policy spaces, and transforming into sites for meaningful political engagement and change. The program documents case studies of local practices to illustrate the constraints and opportunities and ultimately determine whether they could be replicated across localities or potentially scaled up.
Area 4: Environment in conflict
The scope of destruction in the post-2011 wars in MENA have profound environmental implications. In Yemen, Syria, or Libya, armed conflict is contributing directly to severe environmental damage, (both through the destruction of non-human activity and through the targeting of infrastructures critical for civilian wellbeing), while simultaneously making societies less resilient to environmental disasters such as drought or floods and delaying the adoption of needed change to attenuate the damage of climate change. ARI seeks to analyze the nexus of conflict, climate change, and environmental governance in the region, mapping initiatives that address this nexus and lessons learned for environmental peacebuilding.
Publications
Town Hall Meetings Summary: Lebanon’s Solar Energy Boom
Background Paper: Just Environmental Transition in Lebanon
Lebanon’s Solar Rollout: In What Ways Has It Been an Unjust Energy Transition?
Environmental Mobilization Amid Tunisia’s Waste Crisis
Lebanon’s Environmentalists and the Fight for Nature: Reflecting on Successes and Failures of Recent Mobilizations
Yemen’s Environmental Crisis: The Forgotten Fallout of an Enduring Conflict
Environmental Mobilization in Iraq: NGOs, Local Actors and the Challenge of Climate Change
Lebanon’s Unregulated Forests: How Tragedies Can Ignite Homegrown Transformations
Impacting policies: Waste management and advocacy in Lebanon
Origins and prospects of climate change activism in the Arab region: Rethinking the development and market economy model
Egypt’s water policy after the construction of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam
FSO Safer potential marine disaster: Yemen's environment worst nightmare
Marine pollution: A growing concern for the southern suburb of Tunis
Environmental politics in the Middle East and North Africa: Proceedings from First Inaugural Conference
How can activists best advance environmental reforms in MENA?
Water Politics in Libya: A Crisis of Management, not Scarcity
Environmentalism After Decentralization: The Local Politics of Solid Waste Management in Tunisia
The Environmental Impact of Syria’s Conflict: A Preliminary Survey of Issues
Recycling Policies from the Bottom Up: Waste Work in Lebanon
Stopping the Bisri Dam: From Local to National Contestation
Events
2024
WebinarWhat Role do the EU’s Green Policies Play in Supporting a Just Energy Transition in MENA?
2024
Second Annual Conference: On Conflict Climate Change and the Environment in the Middle East and North Africa Region
2023
Conference: Rethinking the Nexus between Conflict, Climate Change and Environment in West Asia and North Africa
2022
WebinarSecond Annual Conference on Environmental Politics: Towards a Just Environmental Transition in the Middle East and North Africa
2022
WebinarWaste Management Governance in Lebanon and Potential Reform
2022
WebinarSolid waste sector reform in Lebanon: What tools of advocacy?
2022
WebinarTunisia at COP26: From the local to the international
2022
WebinarArab Climate Futures: Of risk and readiness
2022
WebinarRealising Mobility Justice in Lebanon: What are the necessary policies?
2021
WebinarFrom Agareb to Borj Chekir: Waste management in Tunisia, an environmental and political problem
2021
WebinarLebanon at Glasgow COP26: Perspectives from Within
2021
Webinar Inaugural Conference on Environmental Politics in the Middle East and North Africa
2021
WebinarA Euro-Mediterranean Green Deal? The Case of Circular Economy in Tunisia
2023
Civil Society Organizations and Just Transition in the Middle East and North Africa: Challenges and Opportunities
2023
WebinarCOP28: The Voices and Demands of Youth Advocates
2023
WebinarCOP28: What Finance is Left for Conflict and Crisis Ravaged Countries?
2024