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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts by Sara Merken.
  • Environmental Sustainability, Does It Make Dollars and Sense?

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  June 14, 2017  //  By Sara Merken
    Wind-Turbines

    While governments will play the central role in delivering the Sustainable Development Goals, they can’t do it without the private sector, said experts at the Wilson Center on April 12.

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  • A Changing Environment Threatens Worker Safety and Productivity

    ›
    May 11, 2017  //  By Sara Merken
    Qatar-worker1

    The implications for a warmer climate are many, but perhaps one of the most frequently overlooked is what it could mean for worker safety and productivity in certain sectors of the global economy.

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  • Violence and Water Scarcity Threaten Historic Quadruple Famine

    ›
    April 19, 2017  //  By Erica Martin & Sara Merken
    WFP-Lake-Chad

    An international food crisis is currently unfolding on a scale not seen since World War II. More than 20 million people in Somalia, Nigeria, South Sudan, and Yemen are in danger of famine. UN Under-Secretary-General and Emergency Relief Coordinator Stephen O’Brien said in March, “We are facing the largest humanitarian crisis since the creation of the United Nations.”

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  • Can Demographic-Environmental Stress Contribute to Mass Atrocities? And the Future of Arctic Cooperation

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    Reading Radar  //  March 30, 2017  //  By Sara Merken

    hendrixfinalIn a brief published by the Stanley Foundation, Cullen Hendrix explores how “the degradation and overexploitation of renewable sources…and unequal access to these resources” can make societies more or less susceptible to experiencing mass atrocities. Hendrix proposes that “demographic-environmental stress” is most likely to contribute to mass atrocities (genocide, war crimes, or crimes against humanity) in agricultural societies that have a high level of group identity-driven politics and economics, exclusionary political institutions, political actors that deprive certain groups, or when governments have low legitimacy.

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  • Climate and Human Change in Biodiversity Hotspots, and Assessing the Tradeoffs of Bolivia’s Quinoa Craze

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    Reading Radar  //  March 1, 2017  //  By Sara Merken

    PLOSIn a recent article published in PLOS ONE, Juliann E. Aukema, Narcisa G. Pricope, Gregory J. Husak, and David Lopez-Carr address the impacts of climate change and population growth on areas with vulnerable ecosystem services and biodiversity, and in reverse, how degraded ecosystem services effect vulnerable populations. The authors analyze locations between 50 degrees latitude north and south that had changing precipitation patterns in the past 30 years.

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  • Torn Social Fabric: Water, Violence, and Migration in Central America

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    From the Wilson Center  //  February 8, 2017  //  By Sara Merken
    Honduras-protest

    In the first half of last year, 26,000 unaccompanied children were apprehended by U.S. law enforcement trying to cross the southern border. Most came from Central American states like El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. Such displacement is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of migration in the region. Many more are moving from rural to urban areas and into neighboring countries seeking opportunity and fleeing violence.

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