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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category *Blog Columns.
  • “The Damn Thing Melted”: Arctic Security in the Blue-Water Era

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  April 26, 2018  //  By Steve Tebbe
    Arctic-Icebreaker

    When Secretary of the Navy Richard Spencer told the media last week that “the damn thing melted,” he wasn’t talking about an ice cream cone. As the Arctic faces unprecedented levels of open water, Spencer and other naval leaders recently testified to Congress about the U.S. Navy’s strategy, which is changing as quickly as the Arctic itself. 

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  • Every Day is Earth Day: Plastic Waste Q&A with Mao Da

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  Q&A  //  April 24, 2018  //  By Lyssa Freese
    plastic waste

    Plastics. From the devastating effects of plastic pollution on our oceans, to the news that plastic bottles likely pollute the drinking water they contain, plastic pollution—the theme of this year’s Earth Day—has been a highly visible issue, and we’ve seen some notable progress on fighting the plastic battle.  

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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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  • Age-structure and Intra-state Conflict: More or Less Than We Imagined?

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    Guest Contributor  //  April 19, 2018  //  By Richard Cincotta
    Rwandan-Soldiers

    Are younger countries at higher risk of civil conflict? The International Crisis Group’s 2018 list of 10 conflicts to watch suggests they might be: Like last year, intra-state conflicts (civil and ethnic conflicts within states, rather than wars between states) dominate the list, and among those, about 70 percent are within youthful countries, or states with a median age of 25.5 years or younger. The only multi-state cluster mentioned in both 2017 and 2018 lists is the Sahel, the world’s most youthful region.

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  • “Journalist on Water Beat Helped Cape Town Avoid ‘Day Zero’”

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    Guest Contributor  //  April 18, 2018  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Cape-Town

    This story by Daniella Cheslow comes courtesy of PRI’s The World and  originally appeared on pri.org.

    Saya Pierce-Jones got a cactus for Valentine’s Day and she keeps a bottle of treated wastewater on her desk. These are the souvenirs Pierce-Jones has kept as the water reporter for Cape Town’s Smile 90.4 FM over the past year.

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  • “Food Power”: American Postwar Diplomacy and Food for Peace

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    Guest Contributor  //  April 17, 2018  //  By Bethany N. Bella
    USAID-Helicopter-AID-Delive

    Food has long been used by countries to wage both war and peace, and the post-war era of American food dominance is no exception. Bryan McDonald, a professor at Pennsylvania State University, traces the United States’ “Food For Peace” strategy in his recent book, Food Power: The Rise and Fall of the Postwar American Food System, arguing that “food was central to national security” during this period.

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  • Taking Our Power Back: Women and Girls Are Key to Food Security During Conflict

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    On the Beat  //  April 13, 2018  //  By Saiyara Khan
    Celebrating-Women

    “Gender equality and women’s empowerment [need to be] at the center of the fight against extreme poverty, hunger, and malnutrition, and also in any efforts to build sustainable peace,” said Ilaria Sisto at a recent CSIS event on the critical role of women and girls in ensuring food and nutrition in times of conflict.

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  • Beyond Violence: Drought and Migration in Central America’s Northern Triangle

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    Guest Contributor  //  April 12, 2018  //  By Carrie Seay-Fleming
    Coffee-Farming

    Starting in 2014, the number of migrants from Central America’s Northern Triangle—Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras—surged, with border apprehensions increasing fivefold from 2010-2015. While apprehensions have declined from their peak, emigration from these countries has not necessarily slowed, and the conditions the migrants are seeking to escape have not changed. Experts blame the region’s widespread criminal violence for spurring migration. But the Northern Triangle countries also share similar ecology, staple crops, and vulnerability to climate events. While environmental and natural resource factors are just part of the complex picture, understanding how they intersect with other migration drivers is key to creating and implementing effective policy responses.

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