Conflict Watchlist 2024
In ACLED’s Conflict Watchlist, we identify 10 crisis areas that are likely to evolve in the coming year, both for better and for worse. The Watchlist goes beyond showcasing violent hotspots and instead offers a view into some of the world’s most complex crises.
2024’s Year of Elections May Fuel World’s Violent Conflicts
The harshest blows of conflict in 2024 will likely fall on the world’s countries that are already the worst hit by violence. In 2023, 97% of all political violence occurred in 50 countries, as ranked by the ACLED Conflict Index. In 2024, our new Conflict Watchlist suggests that many of these same conflicts — fueled by political competition, regional crises, and civil disputes — will catalyze more violence in several of these states.
The unprecedented number of elections this year could be a key driver of domestic violence and international spillover in 2024: They include planned races in Mexico, the United States, and Russia; contested election results in the Democratic Republic of Congo; and a new government taking office in Haiti. Perhaps most prominently, the outcome of the US general election alone could have serious knock-on effects on cartel violence in Mexico and the deadly conflicts in Ukraine and Palestine (and Yemen’s Houthis by extension). National and local elections in Mexico will likely catalyze armed groups’ targeting of election-related figures, elevating already extreme levels of violence.
In several regions of the world, violent contests for power present a long-term challenge to stability and threaten civilians caught in the crossfire. The decades-long insecurity in the Sahel is entering a new phase, as junta-driven state forces resort to more aggressive tactics. In Sudan, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) takeover in Darfur could further prolong the fighting, which has already displaced millions of people and led to thousands of reported fatalities since it began in April. Meanwhile, the struggle between military junta and a disjointed resistance front in Myanmar enters its third year of violent repression and attacks against civilians, but may be at a turning point as coordination among resistance groups builds momentum.
In ACLED’s new Conflict Watchlist, we identify 10 crisis areas that are likely to evolve in the coming year. The Watchlist goes beyond a snapshot of violent hotspots; these local, national, and transnational conflicts represent some of the most complex crises in the world.
An overview of Sudan's ongoing conflict with the SAF and RSF and its humanitarian implications.
An overview of increasing violence and insurgency in the Sahel region, with a focus on Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger.
Violence in the eastern DRC continues with the M23 insurgency, regional tensions, and ADF aggression.
Analysis of the ongoing conflict in Ukraine and its implications for 2024.
Resistance against the military junta in Myanmar gains momentum as Operation 1027 marks a turning point.
An overview of political violence in Haiti in 2023 and predictions for 2024.
Mexico faces political and criminal power struggles with increasing violence amid elections in 2024.
Intensifying polarization amidst the looming US presidential election in 2024.
The ACLED Conflict Alert System (CAST) is a conflict forecasting visualization platform that predicts political violence events up to six months in the future for every country in the world.
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View the latest Conflict Watchlist edition
In ACLED’s Conflict Watchlist, we identify 10 crisis areas that are likely to evolve in the coming year, both for better and for worse. The Watchlist goes beyond showcasing violent hotspots and instead offers a view into some of the world’s most complex crises.
Explore further