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Showing posts from category Friday Podcasts.
  • Sandra Ruckstuhl on Capturing Practical Lessons on Water, Conflict, and Cooperation

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    Friday Podcasts  //  Water Stories (Podcast Series)  //  December 14, 2018  //  By Kathryn Gardner & Truett Sparkman

    Sandra Ruckstuhl 235We realized “there was a need for a toolkit on water,” says Sandra Ruckstuhl in this week’s Water Stories podcast, “with a focus of conflict and conflict mitigation, but also peacebuilding.” Ruckstuhl, a consultant for the World Bank who has researched water programs in Yemen and the Middle East, helped the Wilson Center produce USAID’s Water and Conflict toolkit, which documents examples of successful development interventions focused on water and peacebuilding.

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  • Aaron Wolf on Transboundary Water Conflict and Cooperation

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    Friday Podcasts  //  Water Stories (Podcast Series)  //  November 30, 2018  //  By Evan Barnard & Sharif Wahab

    Aaron Wolf 235“Countries—even countries that don’t like each other much—have, and continue to have, conversations over water resources, even when they won’t about other issues,” says Aaron Wolf, Director of Water Conflict Management and Transformation at Oregon State University, in this week’s Water Stories podcast.

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  • Cultivating Meaningful Youth Engagement in Sexual and Reproductive Health Programming

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  November 9, 2018  //  By Isabel Griffith

    Podcast Summary Photo Thumbnail“We need to mainstream young people into the decision-making process,” said Senator Nikoli Edwards, age 25, of Trinidad and Tobago at a recent Wilson Center event on engaging youth to protect their sexual and reproductive health and rights. “Where it’s not a matter of, ‘let’s bring a young person into the room as an afterthought,’ but it should be written that a young person has to be a part of the discussion or has to be contributing in a significant way.”

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  • Eliane Razafimandimby: Improving the Quality of Maternal and Child Care

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  October 12, 2018  //  By Elizabeth Wang

    Eliane Razafimandimby 235“Even in a weak system without a quality improvement structure, it is possible to support district managers and facility providers to measure and improve quality care,” said Eliane Razafimandimby, Chief of Party of USAID’s flagship Maternal and Child Survival Program (MCSP) in Madagascar, at a recent Wilson Center event on improving the quality of reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child healthcare (RMNCH).

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  • Everybody Counts: Saving the World One Condom at a Time

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  October 5, 2018  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    Can we save the world one condom (or birth control pill) at a time? The third episode of Everybody Counts, hosted by Jennifer D. Sciubba, a professor of political demography at Rhodes College, makes the case that family planning is the foundation of peace and security by highlighting the links between population growth and political instability.

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  • Mothers of Invention: New Podcast from Mary Robinson and Maeve Higgins

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    Friday Podcasts  //  August 17, 2018  //  By Benjamin Dills
    MothersOfInvention_PressShot_10

    Mary Robinson, the first female president of Ireland, and Maeve Higgins, Irish comic, have teamed up to talk climate change with pioneering women leaders from around the world. In the coming weeks, their new podcast, Mothers of Invention, will feature an African politician, an Indian scientist, a Native American activist, and many more.

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  • Everybody Counts: Maternal Mortality

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  August 10, 2018  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    It’s 2018, so why are women still dying in childbirth? This episode of Everybody Counts, hosted by Jennifer D. Sciubba, a professor of political demography at Rhodes College, explores why maternal mortality is a global issue, what policy solutions can keep mothers healthy, and why valuing women is at the heart of the issue.

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  • Parfait Eloundou-Enyegue: Moving from Laundry Lists to Bottom Lines

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    Friday Podcasts  //  August 3, 2018  //  By Benjamin Dills

    Parfait-Eloundou-Enyegue-23“A lot of the advocacy of family planning has been built around establishing a long list of the many ways in which family planning can be relevant” to other development goals, says Parfait Eloundou-Enyegue of Cornell University in our latest Friday Podcast. While comprehensive accounts of the ways family planning access benefits communities, these “laundry lists” are not “clear, synthetic, or integrative,” he says.

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