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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Guest Contributor.
  • Upcycling ‘Beach Snow’: Clearing Taiwan’s Oyster Farming Marine Debris

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    China Environment Forum  //  Guest Contributor  //  October 31, 2019  //  By Grayson Shor
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    “If you go to some Taiwan beaches, you can see snow,” said Chieh-Shen (Jason) Hu, Ocean Initiative Coordinator for Taiwan’s Society of Wilderness, a 6,000-member organization similar to Sierra Club. Hu was referring to pervasive Styrofoam marine debris from western Taiwan’s oldest industry, oyster aquaculture.

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  • Rehabilitating North Korea’s Forests: The Struggle to Balance Conservation with Livelihoods

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    Guest Contributor  //  October 29, 2019  //  By Alec Forss
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    Venerated in art and poetry, Korea’s verdant mountain forests hold a special place in Korean people’s hearts. Like their political systems and economies, however, forest fortunes in North and South Korea have gone in very different directions since the country’s division more than 70 years ago.

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  • Hydro-Nationalism: Future Water Woes Call for Radical New Borders

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    Guest Contributor  //  October 23, 2019  //  By Zachary Q. McCarty & Elizabeth L. Chalecki
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    International political boundaries are arbitrary creations. Today’s borders are better described as imaginary lines on maps, rather than hard barriers between states. Often using mountains, rivers, or other geographical landmarks, modern borders are entrenched in historic tradition rather than logic and fact. As a result, today’s international borders are poorly equipped to handle modern challenges, in particular climate change, which has already begun to threaten the most important state resource, fresh water.

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  • How Fires Threaten Syria’s Security

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    Guest Contributor  //  October 15, 2019  //  By Justin Schon, Robert D. Field & Michael J. Puma
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    Fires are proliferating. By the end of September, over 4,500 active fires had been detected in Syria during 2019. From May through June, 2,106 of these fires burned in northeastern Syria—Raqqa, Deir ez-Zour, and Al-Hasakeh – as documented by the nongovernmental organization, REACH. Meanwhile, widespread fires in Brazil’s Amazon rainforest caused global alarm. World leaders are becoming increasingly concerned about the environmental threats posed by increased fires, but Syria’s fires may also be linked to security threats.

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  • To Achieve Universal Health Care, Invest in Nurses and Midwives

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    Dot-Mom  //  Guest Contributor  //  October 10, 2019  //  By Sydnee Logan & Ann LoLordo
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    Universal health coverage, a sustainable development goal championed by Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), won a key vote of confidence during this year’s United Nations General Assembly in New York City. The member states endorsed primary health care as a means to reach more than 4 billion people who lack essential care—a critical gap to the achievement of universal health coverage by 2030.

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  • Disasters, Vulnerabilities, and Equity: Moving Forward

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    Guest Contributor  //  October 9, 2019  //  By Roger-Mark De Souza
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    Houston after another major flood a few weeks ago; the Bahamas after Dorian; Paradise, California, after the Camp Fire; Haiti after a major 2010 earthquake; Puerto Rico after Maria; New Jersey and New York after Sandy; New Orleans after Katrina; Thailand and Indonesia after the Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004… The list goes on. As we head into another hurricane season, we should once again examine what we’ve learned and prepare to reduce the impact of disasters on communities worldwide.

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  • In Australia, Echoes of Past, Glimpses of Future As Country Braces for Hot, Dry Summer

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    Guest Contributor  //  October 7, 2019  //  By Brett Walton
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    This article by Brett Walton originally appeared on Circle of Blue.

    Water is so scarce these days in Murrurundi, a drought-tested town in the northern reaches of New South Wales, that it arrives by truck.

    Murrurundi Dam, an off-channel reservoir that draws from the Pages River, is functionally dry. An emergency well provides a little local water, but half of the small community’s supply is now trucked in.

    “I’ve never seen the Pages River this low,” Daele Healy, who has lived in town for 15 years, told Circle of Blue. “There’s just no water visible at all. Not even little ponds.”

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  • To Avoid Conflict, Responses to Climate Change in Oceania Must Heed Customary Actors and Institutions

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    Guest Contributor  //  October 2, 2019  //  By Volker Boege
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    This article, by Volker Boege, is based on a Toda Peace Institute Policy Brief, “Climate Change and Conflict in Oceania: Challenges, Responses, and Suggestions for a Policy-Relevant Research Agenda.”

    Considering how vulnerable Pacific Island countries (PIC) are to the conflict-prone effects of climate change, it is surprising that so little attention has been focused on the region. To address the conflict potential of the effects of climate change, as well as of adaptation and mitigation policies and technologies, policymakers must draw upon research related to the climate change-conflict nexus that thus far have been widely ignored or underestimated. These include cultural and spiritual aspects, indigenous knowledge, and indigenous ways of adapting to climate change. To fill gaps in knowledge, more granular ethnographic research should explore the complexity of local contexts in Oceania. Non-Western, non-anthropocentric concepts warrant particular attention. 

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