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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category climate change.
  • Calming the Waters: Why We Need to Better Integrate Climate and Water Policy

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  August 23, 2016  //  By Sabine Blumstein
    Niamey-Niger

    The Nile River is shared by 11 countries, for which it is vital for food and energy production, freshwater, and as a means of transportation. Sharing the resources of the Nile has, however, been politically difficult. Recently, the construction of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam has caused a major dispute with downstream Egypt which fears the dam will affect water flow in its own territory.

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  • Left Out and Behind: Fully Incorporating Gender Into the Climate Discourse

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    August 22, 2016  //  By Cara Thuringer

    More often than not in the discourse around gender and climate change, the word “gender” is used primarily to refer to women. There is no disputing that women are acutely vulnerable to the effects of climate change in ways that are different than men and sometimes hidden. However, this interchangeable use of words neglects other dimensions of gender, sexual orientation, and sexual identity. As a result, we are missing important ways gender impacts people’s experiences with climate change.

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  • Mobile Phone Data Helps Identify Displaced People Faster, Cheaper, More Accurately

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  August 18, 2016  //  By David J. Wrathall & Xin Lu
    Figure1

    If we are to avert the worst of climate change impacts, we need better tools for identifying patterns of displacement and migration around climate extremes. In vulnerable developing countries, increasingly frequent and intense storms will likely exacerbate current patterns of displacement and permanent migration. Displacement often leads to humanitarian crises in the short term and can derail progress toward development in the long term. Because of this dangerous potential, displaced persons and migrants are a common focus in humanitarian responses. However disaster responders must often “fly blind” without the benefit of current, accurate information about the worst-affected populations. To better respond to the impacts of climate change as they unfold, we will need more rapid, cost-effective, and accurate methods for identifying patterns of displacement and migration.

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  • UNEP Releases GEO-6 North American Region Report: A Good Grade, With Qualifications

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  August 16, 2016  //  By Cara Thuringer & Adrienne Bober
    Beaver-Creek-Fire

    With so much focus on global environmental problems, many may wonder how their region is faring more specifically. This is the sentiment behind the United Nations Environment Program’s process for the latest iteration of its flagship assessment, the Global Environmental Outlook 6 (GEO-6). [Video Below]

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  • Africa’s Regional Powers Are Key to Climate Negotiations – But Will They Cooperate?

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    Guest Contributor  //  August 15, 2016  //  By Michael Byron Nelson
    Durban

    Most African states are more vulnerable and less prepared to address climate change challenges than the rest of the world. This observation is supported by a wide variety of sources, including the Climate Vulnerability Index and the Notre Dame Global Adaptation Index. And in fact Africans and their political leaders frequently observe that this crisis, manufactured in the developed world, disproportionately affects their continent. During a meeting of the African Union in 2007, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni called climate change “an act of aggression” by the rich against the poor.

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  • Shreya Mitra, Resilience Compass

    Lessons on Building Peace in Fragile Contexts From South Sudan

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    August 11, 2016  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    south-sudan

    The original version of this article, by Shreya Mitra, appeared on adelphi’s Resilience Compass blog.

    Earlier this month, armed clashes between competing factions of South Sudan’s government broke out in the capital Juba, a day after the nation’s fifth anniversary of its independence. The conflict dates back to political events and factional fighting that first emerged in 2013.

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  • Rowand Jacobsen, Ensia

    Can New Water Tech Help Reduce Conflict in Middle East?

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    August 9, 2016  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    feature_israel_water

    The original version of this article, by Rowand Jacobsen, appeared on Ensia.

    Ten miles south of Tel Aviv, I stand on a catwalk over two concrete reservoirs the size of football fields and watch water pour into them from a massive pipe emerging from the sand. The pipe is so large I could walk through it standing upright, were it not full of Mediterranean seawater pumped from an intake a mile offshore.

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  • Justice and Contemporary Climate Relocation: An Addendum to Words of Caution on “Climate Refugees”

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    Guest Contributor  //  August 8, 2016  //  By Maxine Burkett
    Kiribati

    The idea that climate change is causing migration and displacement is entering the mainstream, but experts have warned against using the term “climate refugees” to describe what we’re seeing in small islands, coastal regions, and even conflict zones like Syria.

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