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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category humanitarian.
  • Amidst Climate Change and Shifting Energy Markets, New Challenges for Transatlantic Security

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    From the Wilson Center  //  July 8, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass

    “In the post-Cold War period, the challenges of energy, environment, climate change, and water have become very much a part of our fundamental transatlantic relationship,” said CNA General Counsel Sherri Goodman, launching a new report on U.S.-EU security at the Wilson Center. [Video Below]

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  • Women: Producers, Not Just Reproducers

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    Dot-Mom  //  May 28, 2013  //  By Schuyler Null

    A major theme on day one of the global Women Deliver conference here in Kuala Lumpur was that “women are not just reproducers, they’re producers.” That is, maternal health and other gender-related issues not only affect the lives of women, girls, and children, but help shape the economies and societies that they live in.

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  • Bouncing Back: How Do Population Dynamics and Social Cohesion Affect the Resilience of Societies?

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    From the Wilson Center  //  April 9, 2013  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    ‘Toward Resilience’ is a series on the meaning of global resilience and vulnerability today.

    “The scale and the impact of disasters today can be greater than anything we’ve previously experienced,” said Laurie Mazur at the Wilson Center on March 18. “The proliferation of disasters has gotten a lot of people talking about resilience, about how we can lessen our risk and how we can recover more quickly from disasters of all kinds.” [Video Below]

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  • Migration Flows, New Growth Demand New Ways to Do Urban Development

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    Guest Contributor  //  January 22, 2013  //  By Patricia Weiss Fagen

    A majority of the world population now lives in urban settings, but many of the most rapidly growing cities are unprepared to accommodate their new citizens. Newly swollen municipalities in poor and institutionally fragile countries are especially disadvantaged by poor planning and management, deficient public services, and citizen insecurity.

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  • Super Typhoon Bopha Shows Why Developing Countries Are Most Vulnerable to Climate Change

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    January 15, 2013  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    If Hurricane Sandy was a wake-up call for many in the United States to the kind of extreme weather that climate change is expected to bring, Typhoon Bopha, which struck the Philippines a month later, is a reminder of what makes developing regions even more vulnerable to these changes.

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  • Tapping the Potential of Displaced Young People in Urban Settings

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    From the Wilson Center  //  January 4, 2013  //  By Payal Chandiramani

    “When young people claim their right to education and health – including sexual and reproductive health – they increase their opportunities to become a powerful force for economic development and positive change,” said Nicole Gaertner, of UN Refugee Agency and the U.S. Department of State, quoting Secretary of State Hilary Clinton at the Wilson Center on December 13. [Video Below]

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  • National Research Council Produces Climate and Security Analysis at Request of U.S. Intelligence Community

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    December 20, 2012  //  By Payal Chandiramani & Schuyler Null

    The CIA may have shut down its dedicated climate change center earlier this year, but a recently released report sponsored by the intelligence community reaffirms the deep connection between climate change and national security. New threats to U.S. national security – like increased food and water insecurity and more natural disasters requiring humanitarian assistance – have emerged as climate change creates unprecedented changes in the global environment.

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  • Top U.S. Leaders: Global Health Is a Bridge to Security

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    November 14, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    “During my career, my viewpoint changed significantly in the understanding and definition of what security really is,” said retired Admiral William J. Fallon at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) on November 2. “My current appreciation of it is that it’s much more fundamental, much more personal, much more at the individual human level than I had thought in earlier years.”

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