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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts by Swara Salih.
  • A Season for Motherhood: The Role of Family Planning in Improving Maternal Health

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  August 28, 2013  //  By Swara Salih

    Ensuring access to family planning is not only a matter of human rights, but can also play a key role in protecting the health of mothers and children. Maternal health experts and program directors met at the Wilson Center on July 31 to discuss the role family planning takes in women’s health in developing countries, what successes family planning programs worldwide have had so far, and what can be done to expand services. Sarah Craven, chief of the UN Population Fund’s Washington office, moderated the event.

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  • First “Nexus Dialogue” on Water, Energy, and Food Kicks Off in Nairobi

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    Eye On  //  August 6, 2013  //  By Swara Salih

    Water, energy, and food – this “nexus” of interrelated resource issues continues to garner attention from analysts, policymakers, and the media. Over the next four decades global population is projected to increase to about 9.6 billion and, worldwide, demand for water is projected to increase 55 percent; energy, 80 percent; and food, 60 percent. In a new video about the first of a series of workshops on this nexus, the International Union for Conservation on Nature and the International Water Association explain how they are working to bring together private and public sector water infrastructure experts from across Africa and the world to build partnerships and create some consensus on a “nexus-based approach” to managing scarce resources.

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  • Miriam Temin: Migrant Girls, Forced or Not, Need Safety Nets

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    Friday Podcasts  //  July 26, 2013  //  By Swara Salih
    Miriam Temin podcast

    “There’s a common myth that migrant girls are forced to move against their will, but in fact what we’ve found through our research is that most migrant girls are involved in the decision to move,” said the Population Council’s Miriam Temin in this week’s podcast.

    Temin spoke at the launch of her and her colleagues’ new report, Girls on the Move: Adolescent Girls and Migration in the Developing World, about the economic incentives for girls to migrate and the risks involved for them.

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  • In Afghanistan, Women’s Health May Be Marker for Taliban Resurgence [Part Two]

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  July 26, 2013  //  By Swara Salih
    Afghanistan Beyond the Headlines Part 2

    “Afghanistan Beyond the Headlines” was a half-day event at the Wilson Center on the country’s unique demography, the plight of women and girls, and prospects for the future. Read part one here.

    Afghanistan’s youth, including more than seven million girls currently in school, are leading the call for new leadership, but many Afghans fear the chilling effect of a resurgent Taliban, said panelists at the Wilson Center during the second half of “Afghanistan Beyond the Headlines.” As the United States prepares to withdraw its forces over the next year, a halt in the country’s progress on women’s health may be the first sign of backsliding on many of the gains made over the last decade. [Video Below]

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  • From Ethiopia to Egypt, Girls’ Education Programs Combat Child Marriage

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  July 22, 2013  //  By Swara Salih
    Child brides in Darfur

    According to the UN Population Fund, more than 140 million girls will become child brides between 2011 and 2020 – an estimated 14.2 million young girls marrying too young every year or 39,000 daily. The majority of these girls do not receive access to education or reproductive health services. [Video Below]

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  • Reproductive Health Organizations Embrace Cross-Sectoral Partnerships in Africa

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    From the Wilson Center  //  July 18, 2013  //  By Swara Salih
    Kenyan mother and child

    “The places in the world where the environment is most fragile, women’s health is most fragile,” said Leila Darabi, director of global communications for the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, at the Wilson Center. “The negative impacts on the environment tend to affect women the most. Women are the people who are planting kitchen gardens, women are traditional healers, and so they often feel the impact first when those things are degraded.”

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  • Harmony in the Forest: Improving Lives and the Environment in Southeast Asia

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    From the Wilson Center  //  July 3, 2013  //  By Swara Salih
    Coffee farmer in Papua New Guinea participating in the Tree Kangaroo Conservation Project

    How can NGOs and civil society promote environmental protection and improve people’s health and livelihoods in remote tropical forests? Two NGOs with innovative programs in Indonesia and Papua New Guinea spoke at the Wilson Center on May 30 about their efforts to simultaneously tackle these issues and highlight their intricate relationship. 

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