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Showing posts from category Friday Podcasts.
  • Jocelyn Ulrich: Enhancing Public Health to Unleash the Economic Power of Women

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  July 27, 2018  //  By Benjamin Dills

    Jocelyn-Ulrich-235Healthy Women, Healthy Economies is a global initiative that aims to unleash the “economic power of women by bringing governments, private sector, and other civil sector actors together to improve women’s health,” says Jocelyn Ulrich of EMD Serono (known as Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany outside of the US and Canada) in our Friday Podcast. Providing for women’s health needs enables them to “join, thrive, and rise” in the economy, “bringing prosperity home to their families and communities.”

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  • Franklin Moore: Fostering Local Innovation Through Community Organization

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    Friday Podcasts  //  July 20, 2018  //  By Benjamin Dills

    Franklin-Moore-235Africare’s work has been built on a “strong belief that community mobilization and local capacity building and innovation are the cornerstones of successful development, and that, for us, includes resilience,” says Franklin Moore, Chief of Programs for Africare, in a podcast from a recent Wilson Center event. “Community engagement, capacity building, and looking at locally driven behavior and social change is what empowers communities.”

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  • Everybody Counts: New Podcast Series on How Global Population Trends Shape Our World

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    Friday Podcasts  //  July 13, 2018  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    74cb75bab2243992e98fab5156007185827084cf97936f24c0c66a651388df90From mass urbanization to massive refugee flows, high fertility to record low birth rates, global population is changing in unprecedented ways.  “Everybody Counts,” a new podcast series hosted by Rhodes College Professor and Wilson Center Global Fellow Jennifer D. Sciubba, launches a lively and thoughtful conversation about the ways human population shapes our world and how we live today.

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  • Energy Innovation in Remote Arctic Communities

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    Friday Podcasts  //  June 29, 2018  //  By Grant Ackerman
    Energy

    Without connections to wider electrical grids, communities in the remote, rural Arctic depend on diesel generators for power—which makes electricity “ten times more expensive” than in the rest of Canada or the United States, said Martha Lenio of the World Wildlife Fund-Canada Arctic Team during a recent Wilson Center Ground Truth Briefing. In addition, spilled diesel “can harm wildlife, impact food and water security, and compromise permafrost integrity,” said Lenio. These challenges have led some communities in the Arctic to seek cheaper, safer, and more innovative energy solutions, said panelists during the briefing organized by the Wilson Center’s Polar Initiative and Canada Institute.

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  • One Woman’s Story: Preeclampsia Goes Untreated in Ethiopia

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  June 15, 2018  //  By Yuval Cohen

    Dempsey-235“This is a woman who did exactly what she was supposed to do; she did exactly what we encourage pregnant women to do,” said Amy Dempsey of the Population Council at a recent Wilson Center event on World Preeclampsia Day. The Ethiopian woman was suffering from preeclampsia—a preventable condition—but like many pregnant women in low- and middle-income countries, she did not receive the treatment needed to stop it. “Pregnancy was the first time she had ever stepped foot in a health facility,” said Dempsey.

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  • Fragile Families: Scaling Up Healthcare in Conflict Settings

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  June 8, 2018  //  By Yuval Cohen

    Panel-235“How do our interventions provide an opportunity to really work at some of the core drivers of instability or lack of resilience?” said Larry Cooley from Management Systems International at a recent Wilson Center event on scaling up reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, and adolescent health interventions.

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  • Halvard Buhaug: Climate Changes Affect Conflict Dynamics

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    Friday Podcasts  //  May 4, 2018  //  By Benjamin Dills

    Buhaug-235“Climate is unquestionably linked to armed conflict,” says Halvard Buhaug, Research Professor at the Peace Research Institute Oslo, in the latest Wilson Center podcast.

    “If we produce a map of the world with locations of ongoing and recently entered armed conflicts, and we superimpose on that map different climate zones or climatic regions, we would very easily see a distinct clustering pattern of armed conflicts in warmer climates.”

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  • Avoiding a Water Crisis: What’s Next for Cape Town — and Beyond?

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    Friday Podcasts  //  April 20, 2018  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    water_capetowndrought

    Intense drought in South Africa’s Western Cape Province has led the world-renowned city of Cape Town to the brink of “Day Zero”—the date at which residents would be forced to collect strictly rationed water supplies from shared distribution taps. Water conservation efforts have so far prevented a massive water shutdown, but the city’s rapid population growth and reliance on surface water dams makes it particularly vulnerable to lower precipitation levels. 

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