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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category conservation.
  • Lisa Dabek: Thinking Long Term to Save Papua New Guinea’s Tree Kangaroos

    ›
    Beat on the Ground  //  December 30, 2013  //  By Schuyler Null

    “I always say what brought me to Papua New Guinea is the tree kangaroo, and what keeps me there are the people,” said Lisa Dabek.

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  • Vik Mohan: Madagascar’s Cyclone Haruna Showed Benefits of Integrated Development

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    December 10, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass

    When Cyclone Haruna swept across Madagascar last February, Blue Ventures, a marine conservation and community health organization, found themselves in a surprising new role. “We went from development, to aid, and back to development, in an integrated way we never expected,” said Medical Director Vik Mohan in an interview at the Wilson Center.

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  • Laura Robson and Caroline Savitzky, Blue Ventures

    PHE Is Alive and Kicking: Inspiration and Endorsement From Addis Ababa

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    December 4, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    AU-conf-center

    The original version of this article, by Laura Robson and Caroline Savitzky, appeared on Blue Ventures’ Beyond Conservation blog.

    The excitement was palpable as we gathered with almost 200 of the world’s finest population-health-environment (PHE) practitioners, researchers, and advocates in Addis Ababa for the International PHE Conference earlier last month! With all of us working on integrated projects encompassing family planning, community health, sustainable livelihoods, and environmental initiatives, there were many ideas and progress updates to be shared.

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  • Population-Environment Program Wins Recognition: Blue Ventures Honored at International Conference on Family Planning

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    On the Beat  //  November 19, 2013  //  By Schuyler Null
    Blue-Ventures-award

    This year’s International Conference on Family Planning (ICFP) happened to coincide with the UN’s annual climate change summit. Perhaps it’s apt then that one of the organizations recognized for excellence is helping to bridge the gap between the environment and family planning communities.

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  • Gorillas and Family Planning: At the Crossroads of Community Development and Conservation in Uganda

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    From the Wilson Center  //  November 13, 2013  //  By Donald Borenstein
    gorillaweb

    “Gorillas are very good at family planning; if we were like them, we’d be much better off,” said wildlife veterinarian Dr. Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka at the Wilson Center on September 26. The Conservation Through Public Health (CTPH) CEO and founder is celebrating 10 years of population, health, and environment (PHE) work in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, bringing health and livelihood interventions to people while protecting mountain gorillas around Virunga and Bwindi Impenetrable National Parks. [Video Below]

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  • Crowded Out: New Evidence Points to Population Growth as Key Driver of Biodiversity Loss

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    November 12, 2013  //  By Kathleen Mogelgaard
    black-rhino

    In 2009, economist Jeffrey Sachs, alongside more than 20 eminent scholars from different fields, highlighted the importance of biodiversity for human well-being in a policy commentary published in Science. They noted the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) included a target to achieve, by 2010, a significant reduction in the rate of species loss, and they also noted that it was one of the MDG targets that was most off-track. “Our lack of progress toward the 2010 target,” they said, “could undermine achievement of the MDGs and poverty reduction in the long term.” The 2010 target was missed, and today species are moving toward extinction at an ever faster pace. Last week’s announcement confirming the extinction of Africa’s western black rhino is the latest sad example of this trend.

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  • Curbing China’s Massive – and Destructive – Distant Water Fishing Fleet

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    From the Wilson Center  //  November 11, 2013  //  By Katie Lebling
    fishing-for-answers

    Last month, two Chinese fishing boats were caught operating illegally in South Korean waters. The incident made local headlines and minor diplomatic waves, but it’s just a drop in the bucket in what has become a troubling trend for China’s foreign water fishing fleets. Over the last decade, there have been more than 4,600 cases of Chinese fishing boats being caught illegally in South Korea’s waters alone, according to the government, and these marine transgressions have not been limited to neighbors.

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  • Removing Boundaries: Sean Peoples on Documenting Integrated Development in Tanzania

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    Eye On  //  October 31, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass

    “We knew that we had a lot of reports, we knew that we had a lot of policy papers, but what we wanted to tell was a good story,” said ECSP’s Sean Peoples speaking recently at Duke University about the short documentary, Healthy People, Healthy Environment: Integrated Development in Tanzania.

    MORE
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