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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Friday Podcasts

    Laurie Mazur at SEJ 2010 on ‘A Pivotal Moment: Population, Justice, and the Environmental Challenge’

    October 17, 2010 By Wilson Center Staff
    “Right now, half the world’s population – some 3 billion people – are under the age of 25,” began Laurie Mazur on the “Population, Climate, and Consumption” panel at the Society for Environmental Journalists 20th Annual Conference. “It’s the largest generation ever that’s coming of age, and the choices that those young men and women make about childbearing will determine whether world population…grows to anywhere between 8 and 11 billion by the middle of this century.”

    “The good news is that everything we need to do to slow population growth is something we should be doing anyway,” she continued. Mazur is the author of A Pivotal Moment: Population, Justice, and the Environmental Challenge and director of the Population Justice Project.

    She was joined on the panel by Brian O’Neill, who spoke about a new study examining the impact of demographics on carbon emissions, and Jack Liu, who spoke about the impact of household size on emissions in China.

    The “Pop Audio” series offers brief clips from ECSP’s conversations with experts around the world, sharing analysis and promoting dialogue on population-related issues. Also available on iTunes.
    Topics: consumption, demography, environment, food security, Friday Podcasts, land, podcast, population, youth
    • http://www.34millionfriends.org Jane Roberts

      I just got a note from a high school girl who read about 34 Million Friends of the U.N. Population Fund in Half the Sky. She sent her one dollar. She took a stand. On this World Population Day I ‘d like to thank the hundreds of thousands of Americans and others who have taken part in this grassroots movement. I think the greatest gift which can do the most good for people the planet and peace is to offer a gift of reproductive health and ALL that it entails to the world’s women and their families. When women and girls have education and choices, everything changes for the better.

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