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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Guest Contributor.
  • What’s in a Name? Making the Case for the Sahel Conflict as “Eco-violence”

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    Guest Contributor  //  July 15, 2022  //  By Olumba Ezenwa

    The Sahel region of Africa is a semi-arid, arc-shaped landmass that stretches 3,860 kilometres from Senegal across portions of Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Nigeria, Chad, and even Sudan. It is also the most neglected and conflict-ridden part of the planet, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council.

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  • Tackling Scarcity and Building Security: A Response to IUU Fishing

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    Guest Contributor  //  July 14, 2022  //  By Johan Bergenas
    USCGC Sequoia conducts IUU fisheries patrol

    Last month, as global leaders met in Lisbon for the UN Oceans Conference, President Biden signed a National Security Memorandum to address the challenge of illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing. This event is a promising sign that the U.S. and other governments are accelerating the response to the threat that IUU fishing poses—not just to the environment, the economy and human rights, but also to global peace and security.

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  • Responsible Research Won’t Be Enough to Control Solar Geoengineering

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    Guest Contributor  //  July 12, 2022  //  By Whit Henderson

    As climate change worsens, the once-unimaginable power to use technology to cool the planet—a method known as “solar geoengineering”—has quietly entered the realm of possibility. Yet the prospect of developing such planet-altering technologies has launched an intense debate: Can this be achieved responsibly? Should it be attempted at all?

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  • World Population Day Shines a Spotlight on Inequities

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    Guest Contributor  //  July 11, 2022  //  By Kathleen Mogelgaard

    July 11 is World Population Day—a day designated annually by the United Nations that should prompt us, in the words of the International Institute for Sustainable Development, to “focus attention on the urgency and importance of population issues.”

    Examining population trends helps describe where we’ve been and suggests where we’re headed. Yet these facts about human existence on our planet also offer insights into how we got here—including a window into places where inequities exist and rights have been denied.

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  • Preventing the Next Pandemic: Scaling Laboratory Operations in Developing Countries

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    Guest Contributor  //  July 8, 2022  //  By Emily Nink

    In 1976, a Belgian Catholic mission and hospital in what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) was stricken with a mysterious illness that caused fever-like symptoms. Most of the patients who contracted the illness died. A young microbiologist named Jean-Jacques Muyembe Tamfum was called to the mission, where he extracted blood samples from those who had fallen ill. The DRC did not have a functional research laboratory at the time, so Muyembe had to send his samples to Belgium for analysis. The results that came back revealed that they contained a new deadly virus: what the world came to know as Ebola, named after a river near the mission.

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  • Exploring Climate Security: Why Bad Outcomes Occur in Some Places and Not Others

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    Guest Contributor  //  July 5, 2022  //  By Josh Busby

    A woman walks with her bony cow passing the dusty and dry field near Saglo village.  The number of livestock dying of lack of food and water is staggering and increasing by the day. Children and their families are struggling to survive due to loss of livelihoods and livestock.  Sagalo village, Korahe zone, Kebridahar woreda (district), Somali region, Ethiopia, 21 January 2022  ©UNICEF Ethiopia/2022/Mulugeta Ayene

    My latest book—States and Nature: The Effects of Climate Change on Security (Cambridge University Press)—has been more than two decades in the making. And as I reflect on that journey, I see significant parallels between my own trajectory and the larger efforts to define and refine thinking about climate security.

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  • Greenhouse Plastic Boom Blights Vietnam’s Vegetable Basket

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    China Environment Forum  //  Guest Contributor  //  Vulnerable Deltas  //  June 30, 2022  //  By Govi Snell & Thinh Doan
    1 Large flower-filled greenhouse in Dalat. Each flower is wrapped in plastic nets to maintain the flowers' shape.
    Cam Ly landfill was, until it was shut down in 2020, the primary dumping ground for the city of Dalat. A hilltop locale 5 kilometers from central Dalat, the landfill was the final destination for the majority of plastic used in agriculture in Vietnam’s Central Highlands region. But in August 2019, heavy rain prompted an outpouring of trash, sending plastic sheeting from greenhouses and untreated agrichemical bags and bottles rushing downhill. The incident covered lowland farms in thousands of metric tons of waste.
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  • PERAC: A Voice for Environment and Indigenous Peoples in Conflict’s Grip

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 28, 2022  //  By Elizabeth B. Hessami
    Screen Shot 2022-06-28 at 4.00.04 PM

    The harm that comes to the environment during armed conflict is often permanent, yet the lack of advocates to fight for its protection as they happen creates a deafening stillness. Indeed, this state of affairs has led to the environment to be seen as the “silent victim of war.” Vietnam, Kuwait, Syria, Afghanistan, Ukraine, and several more nations have been permanently damaged due to the destruction of the environment during armed conflict which can persist long after hostilities have ceased.

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