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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category community-based.
  • Show Me! Laying the Foundation for the Next Generation of Environmental Peacebuilding

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    Guest Contributor  //  Uncharted Territory  //  March 31, 2020  //  By Carl Bruch

    The Climate Investment Fund Zambia.  Photos By Jeffrey Barbee FoAs documented by the New Security Beat, environmental peacebuilding has grown dramatically as a field in recent years. Across the security, development, and diplomatic communities, there is increased recognition that disputes related to natural resources and the environment can escalate to violence, fund armed conflict, and provide an incentive for peace spoilers. At the same time, practitioners and researchers have highlighted numerous ways that natural resources and the environment can be a catalyst of peace by supporting livelihoods and economic recovery, underpinning basic services, and providing a context for dialogue and cooperation.

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  • The Future of Climate Change and Peace

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    Guest Contributor  //  Uncharted Territory  //  March 26, 2020  //  By Maxine Burkett & Maya Soetoro-Ng

    maxineAs fires rage in Australia and in the Amazon, hurricanes ravage the Caribbean year after year, and glacial melt threatens entire communities in the high mountains of Asia and Europe, peace and climate activists might be forgiven for experiencing a growing sense of dread. Environmental events of this magnitude have the potential to simultaneously trigger new ecological disasters and strain social and political systems. The unprecedented challenges borne of the climate crisis will be far-reaching, from large-scale involuntary migration and food and water shortages, to biodiversity and ecosystem loss. These challenges require responses that build social cohesion rather than fuel conflict—responses that are collaborative, just, and climate-resilient.

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  • It’s Time We Scale Up Climate Leadership

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    Guest Contributor  //  Uncharted Territory  //  March 17, 2020  //  By Tegan Blaine

    The urgency to address climate change is only growing. As youth step up and are increasingly vocal about climate change, international negotiations—most recently at COP25—fail to deliver the ambitious global action required for effective response.

    Where does this leave the communities most at risk from climate impacts? How can they adapt and transform in the face of enormous threats, sometimes to their very existence? With researchers and policy experts often focused on technological fixes and pushing new solutions to specific threats, it’s easy to assume that transformation is underway to respond to the new climate reality. In reality, transformative change is tough—especially when up against ingrained habit, culture, and a lack of political and financial resources to support it. Perhaps most importantly, transformative change requires effective leadership and champions—those people who build political will and create momentum to move policy innovations or on-the-ground action.

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  • From Arms to Farms: A Conversation with Casimiro Olvida

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    Friday Podcasts  //  February 28, 2020  //  By Eliana Guterman

    casimiro thumbnail“This project is serious,” Casimiro Olvida said. “It will help the community. If you do not believe me, you can kill me anytime.” He recalled saying this in 1995 to Communist rebels in Mindanao who were suspicious that his USAID-funded team was supporting the Philippine government. We have the same goals, he told them, to help the poor and protect the environment. Apparently, he was convincing. Now Watershed Protection Project Manager of the Sarangani Energy Corporation, Olvida spoke in this week’s podcast with ECSP’s Lauren Risi, at the International Conference on Environmental Peacebuilding in October 2019, describing his decades of work in forest management in the Philippines.

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  • Advancing One Health: Protecting People, Gorillas, and the Land on Which They Live

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    Guest Contributor  //  Uncharted Territory  //  February 19, 2020  //  By Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka

    A group photo of VHCTs after  a training at the Gorilla Health and Community Conservation CenterIn 2003, a scabies skin disease outbreak affecting mountain gorillas in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park was traced to people living around the national park—people with limited access to basic health and social services. To protect the people and wildlife of this special park, we launched Conservation Through Public Health (CTPH), an NGO that promotes biodiversity conservation by enabling people, gorillas, and other wildlife to coexist harmoniously through improved health and wellbeing.

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  • By, for, and of the People: How Citizen Science Enhances Water Security

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    Water Security for a Resilient World  //  December 10, 2019  //  By Brigitte Hugh
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    This article is part of ECSP’s Water Security for a Resilient World series, a partnership with USAID’s Sustainable Water Partnership and Winrock International to share stories about global water security.

    In the Peruvian Andes, where cropland is irrigated and water availability is variable at best, knowledge of highland hydrology is crucial to survival. However, until recently, the locals did not have adequate information to be able to use their water efficiently. So the community worked with a nonprofit to develop a non-specialist/non-researcher run data-gathering project to monitor the water in the region to optimize its use: in short, they developed a citizen science project.

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  • Gordon Mumbo on Water and Livelihoods in the Mara River Basin

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    Friday Podcasts  //  Water Security for a Resilient World  //  Water Stories (Podcast Series)  //  November 15, 2019  //  By Benjamin Dills

    Gordon Mumbo imageThis article is part of ECSP’s Water Security for a Resilient World series, a partnership with USAID’s Sustainable Water Partnership and Winrock International to share stories about global water security.

    “If you live in the developed world or in some urban centers, then the supply of water is guaranteed,” said Gordon Mumbo, team leader for Sustainable Water for the Mara River Basin, a project of Winrock International and USAID’s Sustainable Water Partnership, in this week’s Water Stories podcast. When you wake up, you expect water to flow from your tap. “If you don’t find it flowing, you get upset and will probably call the utility company.” But people living in the Mara River Basin don’t have that luxury. “They have to walk to the river to get water and bring it home,” said Mumbo.

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  • Climate Change, Conflict, and Peacebuilding in Solomon Island Communities

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    Guest Contributor  //  November 4, 2019  //  By Kate Higgins & Josiah Maesua
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    This article, by Kate Higgins and Josiah Maesua, is based on a Toda Peace Institute Policy Brief, “Climate change, Conflict and Peacebuilding in Solomon Islands.”

    Meaningful engagement with the social and conflict implications of climate change in Solomon Islands must be firmly grounded within local worldviews—within Solomon Islanders’ physical, economic, political, and social and spiritual worlds. As we note in a recent policy brief for the Toda Peace Institute, when addressing conflict challenges exacerbated or caused by climate change, approaches should be draw upon community understandings of what constitutes peace and justice. 

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