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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Africa.
  • Backdraft #6: Jesse Ribot on Why It’s So Important for Climate Interventions to Work Through Local Democracy

    ›
    Backdraft podcast  //  Friday Podcasts  //  April 7, 2017  //  By Lauren Herzer Risi

    Ribot2-smallIn a research project spanning more than two dozen case studies on environmental governance in 13 sub-Saharan African countries, Jesse Ribot, professor at the University of Illinois, and colleagues found that while many forest management projects claimed to be working with communities, they were in fact undermining local democracy in various ways.

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  • A Better Model for Future Society, and Analyzing Communal Climate Conflict

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    Reading Radar  //  April 5, 2017  //  By Schuyler Null

    Nature-CCForecasts of future climate conditions are fairly good, but forecasts of future socioeconomic conditions are another story. To get a sense of how climate change will impact society, many resort to simply layering future climate conditions on top of current socioeconomic conditions. That’s a mistake, write Wolfgang Lutz and Raya Muttarak in Nature Climate Change. “We see little value in the purely hypothetical exercise of assessing potential impacts of the future climate on a society that will not exist in the future.”

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  • A Survey of the “War on Wildlife”: How Conflict Affects Conservation

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    Guest Contributor  //  April 3, 2017  //  By Bethany N. Bella
    Kuwait

    Over the last 60 years, more than two-thirds of the world’s remaining biodiversity hotspots have experienced armed conflict. The effects have been myriad, from destruction as a result of military tactics to indirect socioeconomic and political changes, like human migration and displacement. This so-called “war on wildlife” has important implications for conservation and peacebuilding efforts, according to a recent literature review published in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.

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  • Inside ‘The Poachers Pipeline’: Q&A With Al Jazeera’s Jeremy Young and Kevin Hirten

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    China Environment Forum  //  Eye On  //  March 28, 2017  //  By Molly Bradtke

    Rhino horn is the most valuable illegally traded wildlife product in the world, more expensive per pound than either gold or cocaine and much more valuable than elephant ivory. With as few as 25,000 wild rhinos left in Africa, conservationist and law enforcement fight a constant battle with criminal syndicates seeking to kill rhinos and sell their horns to wealthy consumers abroad, many in Asia.

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  • Advancing U.S. Prosperity and Security in a Thirsty World

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    Guest Contributor  //  March 22, 2017  //  By Jane Harman & Carter Roberts
    Chad-from-ISS

    The waters of Lake Chad sustain 70 million people in four countries. Beginning in the 1970s, the 25,000-square-kilometer lake began shrinking due to excessive drawdown for agriculture and mining. Now only 10 percent remains. The dwindling water supply devastated food production and fostered massive economic and political tensions. Many experts credit the worsening conditions for contributing to the rise of Boko Haram, an extremist group that has killed 20,000 people and forced 2.3 million more to flee.

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  • Julia McQuaid on the Complex Link Between Water and Conflict in the Middle East and North Africa

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    Friday Podcasts  //  March 17, 2017  //  By Benjamin Dills

    McQuaid-smallDoes global water stress matter for U.S. national security, and if so, how? That’s a major focus of the next CNA Military Advisory Board report, says Julia McQuaid of the CNA Corporation in this week’s podcast. She talks about the preliminary findings of the report and how the national security community views water.

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  • Midwives’ Voices, Midwives’ Realities: Results From the First Global Midwifery Survey

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  March 15, 2017  //  By Nancy Chong
    Sierra Leone midwife

    “Midwives play a vital role in the health care of mothers and babies,” said Samara Ferrara, a midwife from Mexico, at the Wilson Center on February 27. But in many parts of the world they face a confluence of stressors that make working conditions miserable: low and irregular pay; harassment and disrespect from both patients and doctors; and little supplies, training, or say in the policy dialogue about maternal health.

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  • Backdraft #4: Edward Carr on Climate Response, Motivations, and the Value of Ethnographic Research

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    Backdraft podcast  //  Friday Podcasts  //  March 10, 2017  //  By Lauren Herzer Risi

    Carr-smallUnintended consequences from climate interventions are often the result of not understanding decision-making at a granular enough level, says Edward Carr in this week’s “Backdraft” episode.

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