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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category international environmental governance.
  • Risks and Restoration: Land as a Driver of Conflict and Cooperation

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 19, 2024  //  By Beatrice Mosello & Mary Potts

    Land is crucial to people’s livelihoods, health and wellbeing, culture and identity. So disputes over access to or use of land are a prominent feature in many conflicts. The Environmental Justice Atlas finds that land is at the root of conflict dynamics in approximately a third of environmentally-driven cases recorded. And because land is increasingly under threat—20-40% of global land area is degraded—the risk of conflict is increasing.

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch | June 10 – 14

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    Eye On  //  June 14, 2024  //  By Angus Soderberg

    A window into what we are reading at the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change and Security Program

    Indigenous Rights and the Battle Over ISDS

    Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy group, recently released a report outlining the plight of Latin American Indigenous communities battling against international mining corporations. The study details several examples of transgressions, including an episode from the early 2000s involving Bear Creek, a Canadian mining company awarded a license to explore Indigenous Aymara territories. Their activities sparked organized protests, road blockades, and even violent clashes with police that resulted in deaths and injuries—and forced Peru’s government to revoke Bear Creek’s license.

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  • Climate Security and Europe’s Greens: A Match Made in Political Heaven?

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 10, 2024  //  By Peter Schwartzstein

    When Luxembourg’s Green Party was offered the defense portfolio in coalition talks after performing strongly in the country’s 2019 elections, its senior members faced a dilemma. Never before had a party of its political stripe held that brief anywhere in the world.

    Some of the Green rank and file, drawn from pacifist backgrounds, seemed uncertain as to what to make of it all. But to François Bausch, the Green politician who ultimately took on the roles of defense minister and deputy prime minister there, the answer seemed obvious. Here was an opportunity for the party to advocate for climate security from a highly relevant perch, all while showing voters that it could be trusted with such strategic concerns.

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch | June 3 – 7

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    Eye On  //  June 7, 2024  //  By Angus Soderberg

    A window into what we are reading at the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change and Security Program

    The Perils of Climate Reporting: Global Threats to Journalists Surge

    Environmental journalists are under attack. That is the conclusion of a new global survey conducted by Internews’ Earth Journalism Network and Deakin University. These researchers found that nearly 40% of climate and environment journalists have been threatened with harm, with 11% experiencing actual physical violence—often from individuals involved in illegal logging, mining, and other activities. Testimony from journalists at a recent ECSP event titled Environmental Journalists on the Frontlines of Democracy also made it clear that covering such illegal activities is increasingly perilous.

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  • The Future of Central Asian Water Diplomacy

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    From the Wilson Center  //  June 4, 2024  //  By Eleanor Greenbaum

    Central Asia is known for its rich mineral resources and oil reserves, and its unique geographic position between Russia, China, and Iran. But it is also beginning to position itself as a potential leader in water diplomacy. This June, policymakers, academics, and those in the private sector will convene in Tajikistan for the Dushanbe Water Process. In partnership with the United Nations, the country is hosting biennial conferences between 2018-2028; this June will mark the third international high level conference on the topic.

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch | May 27 – 31

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    Eye On  //  May 31, 2024  //  By Angus Soderberg

    A window into what we are reading at the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change and Security Program

    Panama’s First Climate-Related Relocation

    The Guna Indigenous people of Gardi Sugdub—an island in Panama’s San Blas Archipelago—are moving to new mainland homes in Carti Port’s Isber Yala neighborhood. This move is part of a larger relocation effort supported by the country’s government since 2010 to address the impacts of climate change on its indigenous peoples.

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  • Building a Response to Environmental Violence

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    Eye On  //  Guest Contributor  //  May 21, 2024  //  By Richard Marcantonio

    Human-produced pollution is the single leading cause of mortality today, yet it is not widely considered a form of violence. On July 28, 2022, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) voted—with 161 in favor and eight abstentions—that living in a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment is a human right. Building on a similar declaration by the United Nations Human Rights Council in October 2021, the UNGA has now reinforced the notion that the growing assaults on human health through environmental hazards are transgressions against the basic rights and freedoms of people. Efforts to create a human right to a healthy planet, and even a planetary right to health that would signifying potential rights of nature, are growing both in real activity and demand.

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  • Integrating Climate, Peace, and Security in MENA Countries’ NDCs

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    Guest Contributor  //  May 20, 2024  //  By George Meddings & Frans Schapendonk

    The potential threat climate change poses to peace and security is perhaps nowhere more apparent than in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) are one way MENA countries can address this compound risk.

    MORE
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