This book provides insight into Anthropocene-related studies by IPRA's Ecology and Peace
Commission. The first three chapters discuss the linkage between disasters and conflict risk
reduction responses to socio-environmental disasters in high-intensity conflict scenarios and
the fragile state of disaster response with a special focus on aid-state-society relations in
post-conflict settings. The two following chapters analyse climate-smart agriculture and a
sustainable food system for a sustainable-engendered peace and the ethnology of select
indigenous cultural resources for climate change adaptation focusing on the responses of the
Abagusii in Kenya. A specific case study focuses on social representations and the family as a
social institution in transition in Mexico while the last chapter deals with sustainable peace
through sustainability transition as transformative science concluding with a peace ecology
perspective for the Anthropocene.