Converging Risks: Demographic Trends, Gender Inequity, and Security Challenges in the Sahel


Apr 4, 2022
View Original

Security conditions in the Sahel are rapidly deteriorating. Since 2016, the region has witnessed a 16-fold increase in terrorist attacks. In Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, and Niger, 10.5 million people are facing starvation, and with climate-related disasters increasing and intensifying in the region, food insecurity is projected to rise. Against this backdrop, rapid population growth is outpacing governments’ ability to provide access to basic services. These pressures have transformed the central Sahel into the epicenter of a forced displacement crisis, with dire long-term and global humanitarian consequences that reverberate well beyond the region’s borders.

Governments in the Sahel—the poorest region in the world—struggle to meet the basic needs of their rapidly growing populations. The region’s persistently youthful, high-fertility populations show no signs of decelerating. Birth rates are three to four times higher in the Sahel than in other parts of the world. Estimates indicate that the region’s total population size will more than double by mid-century and the global trend of urbanization will extend to the Sahel, with 50 percent of Sahelians living in urban areas by 2045.

The challenges facing Sahelian countries are mutually reinforcing—but so are their solutions. In a new policy brief, “Converging Risks: Demographic Trends, Gender Inequity, and Security Challenges in the Sahel,” the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change & Security Program and Maternal Health Initiative show that while family planning and girls’ education are often disconnected from the broader security and development discourse, investments in these two areas can yield a wide array of economic and social benefits that simultaneously advance multiple development and security goals.