Climate Adaptation & Security Program (CASP)
Advancing research and policy engagement on the intersection of climate stress and security
FOCUS AREAS
Democratic Resilience
Electoral Systems
Constitutional Processes
Anti-Corruption
Judicial Independence
Civic Participation
ABOUT THE PROGRAM
The Climate Adaptation and Security Program examines the growing intersection between climate stress and regional stability across the Horn of Africa and Great Lakes region. The program examines how drought, flooding, resource scarcity, displacement, and environmental degradation interact with fragile governance systems, armed conflict, and livelihood insecurity.
Moving beyond environmental analysis alone, it focuses on climate adaptation as a strategic security imperative identifying policy responses that strengthen institutional resilience, reduce conflict risks, and support sustainable resource management. Through research, policy dialogue, reports, and decision-oriented briefs, the program advances integrated approaches that align climate adaptation planning with peacebuilding, governance reform and long-term regional stability
PROGRAM COORDINATOR
CONTACT INFORMATION
Edmond Pamba
Associate Director, Research, Innovation & Development
+254 720 323 896 · +254 735 323 896
MEDIA QUERIES
MEDIA RELATIONS TEAM
communications@horninstitute.org
+254 720 323 896
Key Activities
Book Publication
In 2024, the Horn Institute, in partnership with the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung Regional Security Dialogue Program, jointly published a book on Climate, Migration and the Security Nexus in the Horn of Africa. The publication analyzed the interlinkages between climate change, human mobility, and security dynamics, with a focus on how environmental stressors drive displacement, exacerbate resource-based conflicts, and shape regional stability
Research Study
In 2025, the Horn Institute, in partnership with the Ministry of Interior of the United Arab Emirates, conducted a research study on Environmental Crimes, Climate Change and Migration Patterns in the Horn of Africa. The study examined the linkages between environmental degradation, illicit environmental activities, and human mobility, highlighting their implications for security, governance, and regional stability
PROGRAM STAFF & ASSOCIATES
Roselyn Omondi
Fellow
Dr. Shazia Chaudry, Ph.D.
Senior Fellow
Bravin Onditi
Researcher
FEATURED ANALYSIS



