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.
Moustapha Nour Ayeh
Moustapha Nour Ayeh, Associate Professor of Geography, teaches urban planning and climatology at the University of Djibouti, where he is the director of Social Sciences. Having 15 years of experience in urban planning and risk management as a practitioner and academic, Nour Ayeh has published many documents and articles on urban studies and climatology. He has also prepared the health facility map of the city of Djibouti and has helped design the curriculum of geography, urban planning, and risk management for the bachelor and master’s degree at the University of Djibouti.