Environmental disasters in recent decades have drawn scholarly attention to the need to move beyond traditional area studies boundaries in order to understand the wide-reaching impacts of events like tsunamis, cyclones, and, more broadly, climate change. This essay reflects on the efforts of one research team, led by Nathalie Peutz and Alden Young, to disrupt regional divides between East Africa and the Arabian Peninsula, and to study climate change across the littoral states of the Red Sea arena. As the authors highlight, successful collaboration across regions and in this time of multiple crises entails the constant negotiation of constraints and disruptions.
Ian Hoyt
Ian Hoyt is an engagement associate at the Pacific Institute working to expand the reach and impact of the UN Global Compact's CEO Water Mandate, for which the Pacific Institute is co-secretariat. With research interests in institution building and international water governance, in 2021 he graduated summa cum laude from New York University Abu Dhabi with a BA in history. Hoyt joined RedSeaNet as an undergraduate research assistant and has continued to support the project after completing his studies.