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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category *Blog Columns.
  • UN Report Highlights Women’s Roles in Natural Resource Management During and After Conflict

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  January 5, 2015  //  By Priya Kamdar
    DRC_womenNRM

    It’s been 14 years since the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1325 acknowledging women as important agents of change in recovery from conflict and peacebuilding generally. But between 1992 and 2011, only four percent of signatories in 31 major peace processes around the world were women, and only 12 out of 585 peace agreements referred to or made provisions for women’s needs in the reconstruction process.

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  • Crunching the Numbers on Climate Change, Conflict, and Food Aid

    ›
    Reading Radar  //  December 31, 2014  //  By Sarah Meyerhoff

    Two studies push back on recent analyses that claim to demonstrate empirical links between food aid and conflict and climate change and conflict.

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  • Clean Cookstoves Provide Health, Environmental, and Socioeconomic Benefits, So Why Aren’t They Being Adopted?

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  December 29, 2014  //  By Tim Molnar
    Rukia2

    To stop and perhaps one day reverse climate change requires changes big and small. Despite the thousands of power plants burning coal and other fossil fuels today, nearly 3 billion people still depend on solid fuels, such as wood, dung, and crop residues, for their daily energy needs.

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  • Top 10 Posts for 2014

    ›
    What You Are Reading  //  December 23, 2014  //  By Schuyler Null
    ebola

    The drivers of this year’s Ebola epidemic – the worst on record and the first to reach multiple continents – are structural and deep, wrote Laurie Mazur in one of this year’s most-read articles. Deforestation, persistent poverty, and perhaps most importantly, crumbling trust in public institutions all played critical roles in sparking a fire still smoldering in West Africa.

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  • John Welch: Ebola Creating Slow-Burning Bomb for Maternal Health in Liberia

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  December 19, 2014  //  By Sarah Meyerhoff
    welch_small

    “Our responsibility is to call attention to the fact that there’s an invisible crisis happening,” says John Welch of Partners in Health in this week’s podcast. “Ebola is a huge issue for women’s health.”

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  • Two Decades Trying to Solve China’s Environmental Problems: An Interview With WWF’s Tao Hu

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    China Environment Forum  //  December 18, 2014  //  By Susan Chan Shifflett
    Beijing-air-pollution

    Despite some critics, the recent U.S.-China agreement over carbon emissions has sparked remarkable optimism in global climate negotiations. It’s also opened the door to new bilateral engagement between the U.S. and Chinese environmental communities on other issues, including China’s massive air pollution problems (16 of the world’s 20 most polluted cities are in China).

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  • UNFPA: World’s 1.8 Billion Young People Need to Be More Involved in Development

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    From the Wilson Center  //  December 17, 2014  //  By Sarah Meyerhoff
    unfpaswop1

    “A world in which a quarter of humanity is denied full enjoyment of their rights is an unjust world,” said Kate Gilmore, deputy executive director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). “It’s a world without the building blocks for human progress, for human peace, for human security.” [Video Below]

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  • What Climate Conflict Looks Like: Recent Findings and Possible Responses

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    Guest Contributor  //  December 16, 2014  //  By Jeffrey Stark
    Carrying-Firewood-Tillabery

    Climate change and conflict – what’s the relationship? In a recently completed set of field-based studies for USAID, the Foundation for Environmental Security and Sustainability set aside “yes-or-no” questions about whether climate change causes conflict and replaced them with pragmatic and politically informed questions about how climate change is consequential for conflict in specific fragile states.

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