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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts by Wilson Center Staff.
  • Devastation Can Foster Resilience: Interview With Roger-Mark De Souza

    ›
    October 10, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Hurricanes

    The devastation in Puerto Rico is shocking: Half of the population, or 3.4 million people, lack drinking water and 95 percent are without electricity even two weeks after Hurricanes Irma and Maria.

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  • The Arctic: In the Face of Change, an Ocean of Cooperation

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  September 28, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Coast Guard Barrow

    “The United States and Russia… have found ways to continue to cooperate in the Arctic—particularly, but not only—through the Arctic Council, despite the difficulties on other issues relating to other parts of the world,” said Ambassador David Balton, deputy assistant secretary for oceans and fisheries at the U.S. Department of State at a recent Wilson Center forum on the Arctic.

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  • Patrick D. Nunn, The Conversation

    Sidelining God: Why Secular Climate Projects in the Pacific Islands are Failing

    ›
    July 7, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    File 20170516 11937 132doih

    This article, by Patrick D. Nunn, was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

    Unless you are cocooned in a tourist bubble, it is hardly possible to miss God when you visit the Pacific Islands. In every village and on every main street there seems to be a church or temple, packed to bursting point on holy days. It is testament to the considerable influence of spirituality on the way people live in the Pacific.

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  • Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, An Inspirational and Aspirational Leader for Today’s Youth, Has Passed

    ›
    June 6, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    DrBabatundeOsotimehin

    Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, the executive director of UNFPA and an inspiring leader in the global health community, passed at his home on June 4 at the age of 68.

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  • Blair A. Ruble, Urban Sustainability Laboratory

    Making Cities Work as Holistic Communities of Promise

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  May 25, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    San-Francisco

    The original version of this article, by Blair A. Ruble, appeared on the Urban Sustainability Laboratory.

    Shortly after the completion of the Empire State Building, the novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald was shattered by a visit to its observation deck. “Full of vaunting pride,” he wrote, “the New Yorker had climbed here, and seen with dismay what he had never suspected. That the city was not the endless succession of canyons that he had supposed, but that it had limits, fading out into the country on all sides into an expanse of green and blue. That alone was limitless. And with the awful realization that New York was a city after all and not a universe, the whole shining edifice that he had reared in his mind came crashing down.”

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  • Roger-Mark De Souza on the Paris Climate Agreement, With or Without the U.S.

    ›
    Eye On  //  From the Wilson Center  //  May 23, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    “A lack of U.S. government support for the Paris climate agreement will mean that the United States will further isolate itself from international collaboration and cooperation on multiple fronts. It will affect U.S. security, the provision of jobs; U.S. business operations, and U.S. diplomatic efforts. The agreement, because it has a broad basis of support, will continue with or without the United States.”

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  • Lukas Rüttinger, A New Climate for Peace

    Insurgency, Terrorism, and Organized Crime in a Warming Climate

    ›
    May 2, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Kirkuk

    The original version of this article, by Lukas Rüttinger, appeared on A New Climate for Peace.

    Terrorist groups such as the Islamic State and Boko Haram have been dominating the headlines since 2013.  Both groups have gained international notoriety for their ruthless brutality and their rise is posing new challenges for national, regional, and international security. Such non-state armed groups (NSAG) are not a new phenomenon. Today, however, we can observe an increasingly complex landscape of violent actors with a range of hybrid organizational structures and different agendas that set them apart from “traditional” non-state actors and result in new patterns of violence.

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  • Jessica F. Green & Thomas N. Hale, Duck of Minerva

    Why IR Needs the Environment and the Environment Needs IR

    ›
    April 13, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article, by Jessica F. Green and Thomas N. Hale, appeared on Duck of Minerva.

    The state of the global environment is terrible – and deteriorating. The globalization of industrial production and the consumptive habits of 7 billion people have created the Anthropocene, a geologic age in which the actions of humans are the primary determinant of the Earth’s natural systems. This shift creates a profound new form of environmental interdependence, of which climate change is only the most salient example.

    MORE
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