Disorder spread across ACLED’s areas of coverage last year, with political violence and protest surging in more countries than they declined. These trends show few signs of stopping in 2019, as conflict and unrest threaten to expand in scope and scale. In Ten Conflicts to Worry About in 2019, ACLED analyzes the top flashpoints in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, providing key overviews of 2018’s developments as well as a preview of what to watch for in the new year.
The Sahel: Most likely to be the geopolitical dilemma of 2019
Yemen: Most likely to induce 2019’s worst humanitarian crisis
Afghanistan: Most likely to suffer from international geopolitics
Iraq: Most at risk of returning to civil war
Myanmar: Most likely to see expanding ethnic armed conflict
South Sudan: Most likely to see second order conflict problems
Philippines: Most likely to see an increase in authoritarianism
Syria: Most likely to see a shift to mass repression
Libya: Most likely to see non-state armed group fragmentation and alliances
Sudan: Most at risk of government collapse