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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category climate change.
  • What Next? Climate Mitigation After Paris

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  June 30, 2016  //  By Kathleen Mogelgaard
    Xiehe-power-plant

    The Paris Climate Agreement sets forth a bold goal to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, keep global temperature rise below 2.0 degrees Celsius, and employ best efforts toward no more than 1.5 degrees of warming. It also sets forth a new set of rules to achieve these goals. [Video Below]

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  • Perception Matters: New Insights Into What Determines Resilience

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 27, 2016  //  By Christophe Béné
    accra

    Resilience is increasingly recognized as a powerful concept to help practitioners, academics, and policymakers better understand how people respond to shocks and stressors, and how those responses can be linked to longer-term positive or negative development outcomes, such as wellbeing or food (in)security.

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  • How to Translate Paris Pledges Into Action? Regulatory Frameworks, Says World Bank’s Grzegorz Peszko

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    Friday Podcasts  //  June 24, 2016  //  By Sean Peoples
    Peszko

    Nearly six months after the Paris climate agreement, the international community’s attention has shifted from celebration to implementation. Governments have begun outlining climate pledges in the form of intended nationally determined contributions, or INDCs – which are fast becoming nationally determined contributions, or NDCs, as they begin influencing policy.

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  • What Makes Agriculture Vulnerable to Climate Change, and the Mortality Effects of Fruit and Vegetable Scarcity

    ›
    Reading Radar  //  June 23, 2016  //  By Adrienne Bober

    LancetGains in food production and increased awareness of global food security are threatened by looming losses due to climate change, according to a study published in The Lancet. Marco Springmann et al. calculate that climate change will lead to a 3.2 percent reduction in global food availability per person by 2050, driven by changes in weather patterns, increasing frequency of extreme weather, and potential social disruptions to food production like disease and conflict.

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  • In Sustainable Development and Conflict Resolution, Women Seeing Larger Roles

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    From the Wilson Center  //  June 22, 2016  //  By Adrienne Bober
    burkina faso2

    It used to be a luxury to talk about the environment when you were addressing conflict. Today, “we recognize it’s not a luxury anymore,” said Liz Hume, senior director for programs at the Alliance for Peacebuilding, at the Wilson Center on April 29. Similarly, gender dynamics are now being recognized as playing a critical role in sustainable development and peacebuilding. [Video Below]

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  • In Cities, the New Battlefield for Sustainable Development, Women and Girls Need Help

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 21, 2016  //  By Daniela Ligiero
    Palermo

    Last month, the world came to Copenhagen to focus on how to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for girls and women. The Women Deliver Conference, the largest gathering on girls’ and women’s health and rights in the last decade, was a huge success. Convening over 5,700 likeminded people from 169 countries was important to reenergize the movement and inspire action. Preaching to the converted is sometimes important. But now it’s time to focus on those who are not yet converted.

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  • Christopher Golden et al., Nature

    Declining Fisheries Threaten Micronutrient Deficiencies for Millions

    ›
    June 17, 2016  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article, by Christopher Golden et al., appeared on Nature.

    How will the 10 billion people expected to be living on Earth by 2050 obtain sufficient and nutritious food? This is one of the greatest challenges humanity faces. Global food systems must supply enough calories and protein for a growing human population and provide important micronutrients such as iron, zinc, omega-3 fatty acids, and vitamins.

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  • 2015 Migration Factsheet, and the Effects of Policy on Climate-Migration Trends in South America

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    Reading Radar  //  June 16, 2016  //  By Sreya Panuganti

    Climate change is expected to affect rural to urban migration and IDB-Graphic-1Omar O. Chisari and Sebastian Miller, in a recently released working paper by the Inter-American Development Bank, analyze the various policy options available in two cases: domestic migration to São Paulo, and international migration from Bolivia and Paraguay to Argentina. Migration into cities will impact climate change mitigation strategies.

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