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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts by Moses Jackson.
  • Steven Philip Kramer on ‘The Other Population Crisis’

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    Friday Podcasts  //  May 23, 2014  //  By Moses Jackson
    kramer_post

    Ever since Thomas Malthus’ 18th-century treatise linked overpopulation with conflict and poverty, population growth has been a subject of concern and controversy. But does population decline warrant similar attention? According to Steven Philip Kramer, the subject of this week’s podcast and author of The Other Population Crisis: What Governments Can Do About Falling Birth Rates, it does.

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  • Roger-Mark De Souza: Integrated Development Shows Health, Population Dynamics Crucial for Resilience

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    Friday Podcasts  //  May 2, 2014  //  By Moses Jackson
    R-M-GMU

    Resilience means different things to different people. For many in the international development and humanitarian communities, building resilience means responding to growing climate risks through disaster mitigation and planning. But for people like Birhani Fakadi, a 39-year old mother of 11 in rural Ethiopia, it also means access to reproductive health and family planning services, says ECSP’s Roger-Mark De Souza in this week’s podcast.

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  • Alfred Omenya: Gender-Based Violence Must Be Made More Visible

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    Friday Podcasts  //  April 18, 2014  //  By Moses Jackson
    omenya_small

    Reducing gender-based violence requires turning our attention to what we normally do not see, says Alfred Omenya of Eco-Build Africa. In this week’s podcast, Omenya, who collaborated on a four-year study investigating all types of violence in four cities around the world, explains how certain forms of gender-based violence are “invisible” in conventional research and policy.

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  • USAID Launches New Water, Conflict, and Peacebuilding Toolkit

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    From the Wilson Center  //  April 8, 2014  //  By Moses Jackson
    afghanistan_water

    With almost 800 million people currently lacking access to clean water and two-thirds of the world’s population projected to face conditions of severe water stress by 2025, disputes over water are a growing global concern. But while dwindling water supplies sharpen focus on conflict, long-term peacebuilding opportunities are often overlooked. [Video Below]

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  • Assessing Climate Vulnerability and Adaptation: IPCC Working Group II in Their Own Words

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    Eye On  //  April 3, 2014  //  By Moses Jackson

    The latest report by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) brings new evidence to bear on the real and potential impacts of climate change, emphasizing the need to manage risks and build resilience. In a dramatic, slickly produced video accompanying the much-anticipated Working Group II contribution to the report, released on March 30, several of the working group’s dozens of authors discuss key issues addressed in their section, which covers “impacts, adaptation, and vulnerability.”

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  • Deepa Pullanikkatil: Climate Adaptation Efforts Reveal Health-Environment Links in Malawi

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    Friday Podcasts  //  March 14, 2014  //  By Moses Jackson
    deepa_small

    Effective development interventions often require thinking outside the box. In southern Malawi’s Lake Chilwa basin, where environmental degradation, public health, and population dynamics intersect in unpredictable ways, people like Deepa Pullanikkatil of Leadership for Environment and Development (LEAD) are challenging conventional thinking with promising results.

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  • Unveiling the Dark Places: Urbanization, Economic Change, and Gender-Based Violence

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    From the Wilson Center  //  March 12, 2014  //  By Moses Jackson
    kibera

    “If there was a perfect slum, Kibera would be it.” The notoriously overcrowded and underserved settlement in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi captivates the public imagination, engendering visions of urban violence, poverty, and hopelessness, said Caroline Wanjiku Kihato of the University of the Witwatersrand at the Wilson Center on February 18. The area was ravaged by ethnic violence that erupted across the country following Kenya’s disputed 2007 elections, pitting neighbor against neighbor in tribal clashes that killed more than 1,000 people, displaced many thousands more, and provoked an alarming surge in sexual violence.

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  • From Victoria to Chilwa: Integrated Development in Two African Lake Basins

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    From the Wilson Center  //  March 5, 2014  //  By Moses Jackson
    Lake-Chilwa_before_after

    In Lake Victoria and Lake Chilwa basins, interconnected development challenges defy sectoral boundaries, said experts at the Wilson Center on February 10. According to Deepa Pullanikkatil of Leadership for Environment and Development and Doreen Othero of the Lake Victoria Basin Commission, growing populations, shrinking resource bases, and persistent human health concerns demonstrate the need for integrated development approaches that combine population, health, and environmental (PHE) interventions. “We need different sectors working together to achieve the greater goal,” said Pullanikkatil. [Video Below]

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