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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • VIDEO: Leona D’Agnes on Population, Health, and Environment

    April 15, 2009 By Wilson Center Staff
    Integrated population-health-environment (PHE) programs “are very cost-effective ways” to develop “community capacity—to strengthen their know-how, and bring…in some additional appropriate technologies” to promote livelihoods, says Leona D’Agnes in this short expert analysis from the Environmental Change and Security Program.

    “It doesn’t require a lot of money, but it does require capacity building and being able to motivate communities and help them to understand that it is not just the government that’s responsible for their development. Their own food security and environmental security rests with their abilities to manage their assets, their natural resources, to plan their families, and make sure their children finish school.”

    In this expert analysis, D’Agnes, currently a consultant to CDM International on PHE and forestry in Nepal, discusses the linkages between population, health, and environment involved in her work as a technical adviser for PATH Foundation Philippines and its IPOPCORM project.

    To learn more about population, health, and environment issues, please visit our PHE page.
    Topics: development, environment, family planning, food security, global health, livelihoods, maternal health, natural resources, PHE, Philippines, population, video

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