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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts by Arundhati Ponnapa.
  • Fire Warning: From India to California, Change Fuels the Flames

    ›
    October 31, 2017  //  By Arundhati Ponnapa
    California-Fire-Damage

    Earlier this month, more than 40 people perished and 20,000 people were ordered to evacuate as Northern California faced some of its deadliest fires in decades. Potentially fueled by climate change, these fires—only the only the latest in a string of fires to strike the state—will reshape landscapes and lives, as I know well from personal experience on the other side of the world.

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  • People not Polar Bears: National Security and the Changing Climate

    ›
    On the Beat  //  July 19, 2017  //  By Arundhati Ponnapa
    B-1_Bombers_on_Diego_Garcia

    “If we really cared about the polar bears, we would have done something,” quipped retired U.S. Navy Rear Admiral David Titley, who gave an Environmental Research and Education Distinguished Lecture at the National Science Foundation on June 27, 2017. Titley framed climate change in terms of U.S. national security interests, focusing on infrastructure, the changing Arctic, and how environmental factors can exacerbate conflict.

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  • Sustainable Development Approaches to Youth and the Demographic Dividend

    ›
    On the Beat  //  July 11, 2017  //  By Arundhati Ponnapa
    School-Opening

    “Investing in youth is a recipe for success,” said Elizabeth Dawes Gay, senior policy analyst at the Population Reference Bureau (PRB), during a webinar on June 22, 2017, organized by PRB’s PACE project on the connections between the population, health, environment (PHE) approach to international development, and achieving the demographic dividend.

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  • Climate, Conflict, and Refugees: Examining the Impact of Environmental Change on Human Security

    ›
    On the Beat  //  June 26, 2017  //  By Arundhati Ponnapa
    6401102817_e0343e86f4_z (1)

    “There’s a long list of crises that can have a natural resource base,” said Anne C. Richard, former assistant secretary of state for population, refugees, and migration, at a Stimson Center panel on June 13, 2017, on the impacts of climate change on human security and mobility. The panelists included Kelly McFarland of Georgetown’s Institute for the Study of Diplomacy (ISD), Rod Schoonover of the National Intelligence Council, and Sally Yozell, director of Stimson’s Environmental Security Program.

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