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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category gender.
  • U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator: DREAMS Program Reduced HIV/AIDS Among Adolescent Girls in Sub-Saharan Africa

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  February 6, 2018  //  By Yuval Cohen
    Gender-Innovation-Event

    “There is no healthcare delivery system for non-pregnant 15- to 24-year olds,” said the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator, Ambassador Deborah Birx, at a recent Wilson Center event on efforts to reduce the prevalence of HIV/AIDS among adolescent girls in sub-Saharan Africa. In 2014, the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) established the DREAMS program, which aims to create “a health care system where young people interact in a proactive and positive way,” said Birx.

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  • Story of the Decade: Population Dynamics (and Women and Water) Top List of Our Most Popular Posts

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    What You Are Reading  //  January 16, 2018  //  By Meaghan Parker
    Ibadan-streets

    This One Goes to 11.

    Eleven years ago this week, the New Security Beat began covering population, environment, and conflict connections. Today, our goal remains the same as in 2007: to provide insight on today’s new security threats and to share overlooked opportunities for cooperation. As we wrote then, “countries in crises often share the problems of rapid population growth and deteriorating environmental resources”: and unfortunately, the same trends continue undermine peace and deepen poverty. But we’ve also analyzed notable global efforts, including the Sustainable Development Goals and the growing resilience agenda, that offer hope for progress.

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  • “It Can Be Done”: Address Malata’s Dream for Safe Motherhood in Malawi

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  January 11, 2018  //  By Yuval Cohen

    Malata-Small“Women still die…and they die preventable deaths,” said Address Malata, vice chancellor of the Malawi University of Science and Technology, at a recent Wilson Center event honoring the 30th anniversary of the Safe Motherhood Initiative. Malata—a midwife and the former vice president of the International Confederation of Midwives—told the heart-wrenching story of a pregnant woman who, like so many others, died waiting for transportation.

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  • The 30th Anniversary of the Safe Motherhood Initiative

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  January 4, 2018  //  By Sarah Barnes
    Mothers-Vaccination

    Since 1987, the number of women dying during pregnancy and delivery has dropped by 43 percent, saving hundreds of thousands of women’s lives—and changing the lives of their families—around the world. “Our achievement in making maternal mortality an injustice that needs to be recognized by health ministers, by heads of state, by heads of agencies, has been, I think, the single greatest achievement of the Safe Motherhood Initiative” since it began 30 years ago, said Ann Starrs, President and CEO of Guttmacher Institute, at a Wilson Center event marking the anniversary of this important effort.

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  • The Burden of Care: The Impact of Progressive Policies

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  December 22, 2017  //  By Sarah Barnes & Yuval Cohen
    women_caregivers

    The burden of care—the time, energy, and costs of caring for other people—is growing, and women shoulder the heaviest load. This burden can have negative consequences for businesses, too, as it affects the health and productivity of workers, as well as economic growth. At a recent Wilson Center Ground Truth Briefing, four leading experts discussed the ways in which progressive policies could help balance the burden of care to increase economic productivity and benefit both employers and employees.

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  • The Big Picture: Measuring Efforts to Build Resilience

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    From the Wilson Center  //  December 18, 2017  //  By Yuval Cohen
    Haiti-Flood

    “Resilience isn’t an outcome,” said USAID Resilience Coordinator Greg Collins at a recent Wilson Center event on measuring resilience; it is “the ability to manage adversity and change without compromising future well-being.” The wide array of individual factors that contribute to building resilience—ranging from livestock insurance and microsavings, to risk tolerance and women’s decision-making—can be challenging to measure individually, let alone in concert. But this assessment is essential for designing and implementing successful development projects: “We have to be able to answer the question: Is this building resilience, yes or no?” said Cornell University’s Chris Barrett.

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  • The Single Best Intervention: Thirty Years of Safe Motherhood

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    Dot-Mom  //  December 4, 2017  //  By Sarah Barnes

    30th-Motherhood

    Over the last 30 years, the world has seen a 44 percent decrease in maternal mortality. At the same time, safe motherhood has evolved from an often neglected component of maternal and child health programs to a fundamental element of the global health agenda, leading to improved women’s health and rights. These advancements are, in large part, due to the 1987 establishment of the Safe Motherhood Initiative. To help celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Safe Motherhood Initiative, Dot Mom asked leaders in the field to reflect on the most impactful intervention of last 30 years. Join us at the Wilson Center on Friday, December 8, 1-5 p.m., to discuss these interventions—and those to come in the next 30 years.

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  • It Takes a Village: Communities Are Key to a Resilient Health System

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  October 25, 2017  //  By Saiyara Khan
    Community-reconciliation-me

    “Resilience means the ability to cope and move ahead,” said Joan Dalton, the gender lead at THINK Liberia during the second session in a series of conversations on resilience and health at the Wilson Center. As conflicts, epidemics, and natural disasters increasingly leave global health systems vulnerable to devastation, it is important to build resilient health systems through interventions that support community resilience, agreed global health experts at the panel event co-hosted by CARE and the Maternal Health Initiative.

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