Editors: Abdul Kader Mohiuddin, Úrsula Oswald- Spring, Omar S. Rasheed

Socioeconomic Challenges Amidst a Global Triple Threat of Conflicts, COVID-19, and Climate Change: War-torn Countries (Part 1)

eBook: US $89 Special Offer (PDF + Printed Copy): US $161
Printed Copy: US $116
Library License: US $356
ISBN: 979-8-89881-460-1 (Print)
ISBN: 979-8-89881-459-5 (Online)
Year of Publication: 2026
DOI: 10.2174/97988988145951260101

Introduction

The book explores the evolving global socioeconomic crisis shaped by the convergence of the COVID-19 pandemic, persistent cross-border and internal conflicts, international sanctions and recurring natural disasters. Situated within the broader field of global political economy and development studies, it examines how these overlapping shocks disrupt economic systems, trade and energy pathways and essential sectors such as healthcare, agriculture, education and communication. The central theme emphasises the interconnected and mutually reinforcing nature of these crises, highlighting how structural vulnerabilities and human-driven factors intensify their scale and impact across both developed and developing regions.

A key strength of the book lies in its integrative, multidisciplinary approach, combining economic analysis with political and environmental perspectives. It offers structured and timely insights into developments across several regions. It presents a human-centred narrative that consistently foregrounds the lived experiences of ordinary people, especially in war-torn and vulnerable societies.

The chapters collectively trace the progression of these crises across regions and sectors. Early sections examine the pandemic's economic and social aftermath, followed by analyses of major conflict zones, including Ukraine and the Middle East and their far-reaching implications for global supply chains, food security and energy markets. Subsequent chapters explore the role of sanctions, climate stress and geopolitical tensions, particularly the ripple effects of U.S.–China rivalry, in reshaping global stability. Together, they reveal how strategic chokepoints such as the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea have become critical pressure points in an increasingly fragile global system.

Part 1 introduces the book's key themes before presenting chapters on conditions in war-torn countries, including Mexico, Ukraine, Afghanistan, Syria, Sudan and Yemen.


Target Readership :

Researchers and students studying war and conflict, public health, epidemiology, international affairs, peace and conflict studies and health economics; diplomats, policy and development analysts and humanitarian workers.

Preface

War-torn countries stand at the epicenter of overlapping crises in which prolonged insecurity, weakened institutions, and stagnant economic growth are intensified by humanitarian and food emergencies, mass displacement of civilians, and worsening security conditions, alongside the collapse and destruction of infrastructure, rising inflation and currency depreciation, and widening gaps in access to education and healthcare. These challenges are further compounded by disruptions in labor markets, increasing vulnerability among affected populations, and growing dependence on international assistance. The climate crisis adds additional pressure, while the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed and deepened existing structural inequalities by overwhelming fragile health systems, slowing recovery, and reinforcing long-term fragility in already weakened contexts, ultimately undermining resilience and limiting prospects for sustainable development across fragile and conflict-affected regions worldwide. This book originated from the need to address a persistent analytical gap—the lack of an integrated, cross-country understanding of how conflict, pandemic shocks, and climate pressures interact in war-affected settings—despite their clearly compounding effects on socioeconomic stability. Focusing on countries such as Mexico, Afghanistan, Ukraine, Sudan, Yemen, and Syria, the volume examines how conflict-driven displacement, food insecurity, inflation, environmental damage, and institutional breakdown recur across diverse contexts and are further amplified by overlapping shocks. Across these cases, crises do not occur independently but interact and cascade, producing far-reaching consequences that extend beyond national borders and shape regional and global stability. By bringing together comparative analysis and empirical insights, this book aims to equip readers with a clearer framework for understanding these interconnected risks while underscoring the urgency of coordinated approaches that integrate conflict resolution, climate resilience, public health capacity, and sustainable economic recovery.

Abdul Kader Mohiuddin
Alumnus, Faculty of Pharmacy
Dhaka University, Dhaka, Bangladesh

Úrsula Oswald-Spring
Regional Multidisciplinary Research Center
National University of Mexico
Mexico City, Mexico

&

Omar S. Rasheed
University of Almería, Carretera Sacramento
S/N, La Cañada de San Urbano, 04120
Almería, Spain