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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category environment.
  • Going Big on Climate: Opportunities and Challenges Facing the New Administration

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    From the Wilson Center  //  March 16, 2021  //  By Ratia Tekenet
    2-24 Screenshot

    “With climate change, we can make no small plans—we need to go big,” said Lieutenant General Wallace Gregson (ret.), former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Asian and Pacific Security Affairs, during a recent event co-hosted by the Environmental Peacebuilding Association and Wilson Center on opportunities and challenges facing the new administration relating to the environment, peace, and conflict.

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  • A Conversation with Marisa O. Ensor on Securitizing Youth and Youth’s Role in Peace and Security Agendas

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    Africa in Transition  //  Friday Podcasts  //  March 12, 2021  //  By Amanda King

    Securitizing Youth Thumbnail“I’ve been quite impressed by the wide diversity and complexity of young women’s and men’s engagement for peacebuilding and development often while confronting seemingly insurmountable challenges,” says Marisa O. Ensor, Adjunct Professor in the Justice and Peace Studies Program at Georgetown University, in this week’s Friday Podcast.

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  • Climate-Conflict Research: A Decade of Scientific Progress

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 23, 2021  //  By Halvard Buhaug & Nina von Uexkull
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    The last decade was the warmest on record, with 2020 tied with 2016 for the all-time high average annual global temperature. This 10-year period also saw armed conflicts at severity levels not seen since the Cold War era. Could there be a causal link between these trends?

    To the frustration of policymakers and laymen alike, empirical research has been unable to provide a simple and coherent answer to this question. Instead, studies of climate-conflict connections have for a long time continued to produce diverging findings and – occasionally – inspired heated debates. So, where do we stand?

    In a review article introducing a new special issue of the Journal of Peace Research (JPR) on the security implications of climate change, we assess the nature and extent of scientific progress in climate-conflict research over the past decade. As yardsticks for measuring progress, we identify seven key research priorities frequently advocated in earlier reviews of the quantitative literature. 

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  • Nature-based Solutions Vital to Mitigating Conflict-linked Environmental Damage

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 18, 2021  //  By Wim Zwijnenburg
    IMG_5386

    When the dust settles after wars and armed conflicts, people are eager to rebuild their lives and livelihoods in the wake of the devastation wrought upon their country. Often one issue is largely absent in post-conflict reconstruction and development planning: addressing conflict-linked destruction of the environment. 

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  • Experts Spotlight Bottom-Up Approaches and the Impacts of Conflict on Infrastructure in the Next Wave of Environmental Peacebuilding

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    From the Wilson Center  //  February 16, 2021  //  By Ratia Tekenet
    1-27_Panel Screenshot

    “For 30 years, a community of researchers, practitioners, and policymakers have been working to untangle the complex relationships between environmental change and human and national security, and find entry points for policies and programs that build on these connections to create a more resilient and sustainable peace,” said Lauren Risi, Project Director of the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change & Security Program at a recent event that featured contributors to a new special issue of International Affairs on environmental peacebuilding.

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  • Top Biden Climate Advisor, Others Preview 2021 Energy and Enviro News

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    February 12, 2021  //  By Joseph A. Davis
    New,York,,Usa,-,21,September,2014.,Person,Carries,A 

    This article, written by Joseph A. Davis, was originally published by the Society of Environmental Journalists. A recording of the 2021 Journalists’ Guide Event can be found here.

    White House climate advisor Gina McCarthy gave an exclusive preview of the Biden administration’s Jan. 27 rollout of climate initiatives to more than 1,100 journalists, environmental experts and others watching a virtual program organized the same day by Society of Environmental Journalists. 

    The SEJ’s ninth annual Journalists’ Guide to Energy & Environment look-ahead event, entirely online due to the pandemic, was hosted for the second year by the National Geographic Society and co-sponsored by the Wilson Center.

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  • Pan-African Response to COVID-19: New Forms of Environmental Peacebuilding Emerge

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 8, 2021  //  By Elaine (Lan Yin) Hsiao, Fakunle Aremu & Ousseyni Kalilou
    Volunteers,At,The,Lagos,Food,Bank,Initiative,Outreach,To,Ikotun,

    Early predictions about COVID-19’s impacts on Africa suggested that the continent would be a disaster zone marked by weak medical systems collapsing under strain and undemocratic states failing to provide social services to destitute populations. These predictions did not come to pass. Instead, many countries across the continent stepped up early on to join the world in curtailing the spread of COVID-19. The second order effects of the virus have been significant, however. Despite the low numbers of infections and deaths, lockdowns and the decline of a large percentage of informal trade and commerce in Sub-Saharan Africa have sent the region’s economy into recession, with increased inflation rates, widespread unemployment, and increased food insecurity. It’s within this context that collaboration (internationally and within the continent, between governments, the private sector, and local communities) to protect the environment—and by extension enhance livelihoods, promote sustainable development, and achieve enduring peace—has taken new forms.

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  • Zafar Imran, Le Monde diplomatique

    Climate Change in the Indian Farmers’ Protest

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 4, 2021  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Haryana,,India,December,9,2020:,A,Sikh,Farmer,Showing,An

    This article, written by Zafar Imran, originally appeared in Le Monde diplomatique.

    The ongoing farmers’ movement in India has taken the world’s largest democracy by storm. Hundreds of thousands from all over the country have laid siege to New Delhi for more than two months. As both the protestors and the government dig their heels in, the chances of confrontation and violence are increasing by the day.

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