Lisa M. Sarida Lippert

(PhD candidate, Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker Center for Science and Peace Research ZNF, University of Hamburg / Germany)

Lisa M. Sarida Lippert is a PhD candidate at the Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker – Centre for Science and Peace Research (ZNF) at the University of Hamburg. She studied political science at Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz University in Hannover and Université Cheikh Anta Diop in Dakar, and holds a master’s degree in peace and conflict studies from Otto von Guericke University in Magdeburg.
Since 2018, she has been working in the Conflicting Use of Land and Water research group at ZNF, together with colleagues from biology and sociology. Her PhD project investigates the daily practices of small-scale farmers in drylands with a case study in the region south of Bouhedma National Park, Tunisia.
Lippert’s areas of academic interest are interdisciplinary research on community peace and conflict management and their links to natural resource distribution and use, particularly with respect to desertification and water scarcity.

Project Resources & Sustainability 

Project: Doing Peace in Drylands

Global warming, desertification and water scarcity are severely challenging the living conditions of rural populations. However, natural resource depletion and competing forms of use do not necessarily lead to violent conflicts, as recent research shows. They also present an opportunity for environmental cooperation, community empowerment and conflict prevention, while the literature on climate change and conflict suffers from a case selection bias, which leads to neglect of the peaceful outcome option. In order to understand the dynamics present in a climate change and conflict context, researchers are encouraged to increasingly focus on peaceful and nonviolent contexts.
The proposed project takes up this idea. It investigates the daily practices of small-scale farmers in the region south of Bouhedma National Park by asking the following research questions:
– How do they navigate daily natural resource challenges?
– How do they adapt to land degradation and ecological deprivation?
– What role do women play in this context and how is gender presented?
The project contributes to a better understanding of how rural communities in drylands negotiate natural resources on a daily basis and the consequences this has for (local) peace and conflict prevention.

Contact: lisa.lippert[at]uni-hamburg.de
On the research project: Click here 

English