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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category international environmental governance.
  • Corruption, Climate Change, and Vulnerability in Small-Island States

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  May 19, 2016  //  By Roger-Mark De Souza
    SIDS

    “Wilson Perspectives: Combatting Corruption” is a series of short essays that originally appeared on WilsonCenter.org.

    As international funding to support environmental management and development increases, the danger of associated corruption grows and requires greater attention. Small-island developing states (SIDS), greatly exposed to the damage caused by climate change, are particularly vulnerable. These small, trailblazing countries in the Pacific, Caribbean, and Indian Ocean are making progress in addressing climate threats, but will need international support and local commitment regarding rule of law and corruption in the climate sector as they try to prevent the worst effects of climate change and find a sustainable way to develop.

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  • Lisa Palmer, Yale Environment 360

    New Explanation for Bee Die-Offs and What It Means for Human and Environmental Health

    ›
    May 12, 2016  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    bee pollen2

    The original version of this article, by Lisa Palmer, appeared on Yale Environment 360.

    Specimens of goldenrod sewn into archival paper folders are stacked floor to ceiling inside metal cabinets at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. The collection, housed in the herbarium, dates back to 1842 and is among five million historical records of plants from around the world cataloged there. Researchers turned to this collection of goldenrod – a widely distributed perennial plant that blooms across North America from summer to late fall – to study concentrations of protein in goldenrod pollen because it is a key late-season food source for bees.

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  • Why Do Land Grabs Happen? Because They Can

    ›
    May 9, 2016  //  By Michael Kugelman
    Brazil forest

    In January, over the objections of indigenous groups that live there, the government of Ecuador sold oil exploration rights to 500,000 acres of the Amazon to a consortium of Chinese companies. Whenever we hear about stories like this, there is a tendency to think: How can this happen? How can obscenely rich investors run roughshod over the land, livelihoods, and rights of impoverished local communities, and with utterly no consequences?

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  • Water Is the Climate Challenge, Says World Bank

    ›
    May 6, 2016  //  By Schuyler Null

    How will climate change affect you? Probably through water.

    That’s the major message of a new World Bank report that finds the ways governments treat water can have a profound effect on the economy.

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  • Behind the Headlines, Emerging Security Threats in the Middle East

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  May 4, 2016  //  By Anders Jägerskog & Ashok Swain
    Lebanon-camp

    The Middle East, as much as ever, is the focus of international attention, but the obvious crises may be a distraction from deeper underlying issues.

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  • How Effective Is the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative? And a Transatlantic Food Security Strategy

    ›
    April 28, 2016  //  By Gracie Cook

    EITI ImageSovacool et al. in a study published in World Development compare the performance of the first 16 member countries of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) to their performance before membership and to other non-member countries and find little difference in most governance and economic development categories.

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  • From Climate Challenge to Climate Hope: Embracing New Opportunities This Earth Day

    ›
    April 22, 2016  //  By Roger-Mark De Souza
    Haiti factory1

    This Earth Day, the United States, China, and Canada are among more than 170 countries expected to take part in the largest one-day signing of an international agreement in history. The ratification of the climate agreement hammered out at the Paris Conference of Parties (COP-21) last December could be the most significant elevation of environmental issues on the global stage yet.

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  • Turning the Impending Mosul Dam Disaster Into Opportunity

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  April 19, 2016  //  By Azzam Alwash
    MosulDam

    The original version of this article appeared as part of the Middle East Program’s Viewpoints series.

    Iraq has seen its share of calamities in recent years, but none is as dangerous as the impending failure of the Mosul Dam. A breach of the dam will result in a tsunami-like wave that sweeps through cities and hamlets along the Tigris River from Mosul to as far south as Amarah and even Basra. Baghdad would be submerged under five meters of water within four days. Not only do experts estimate the possible fatalities to range from 500,000 to more than 1 million, but consider the logistics of trying to provide electricity, drinking water, food, hospitals, transportation, and diesel for millions of people.

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