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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category land.
  • Conflict in Food Producing and Consuming Communities, and How to Help Women in the DRC

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    Reading Radar  //  July 8, 2016  //  By Cara Thuringer

    Screen-ShotA working paper by Eoin Mcguire (Brown University) and Marshall Burke (Stanford University) examines the impact of food price increases on conflict in Africa. Under the hypothesis that negative income shocks contribute to the outbreak of conflict, the authors compare the effect of significant increases in food prices in communities that predominantly produce food to the effect in those that predominantly consume food. In food producing areas, conflict driven by food surplus allocations increased but conflict driven by territorial factors decreased.

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  • What Makes Agriculture Vulnerable to Climate Change, and the Mortality Effects of Fruit and Vegetable Scarcity

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    Reading Radar  //  June 23, 2016  //  By Adrienne Bober

    LancetGains in food production and increased awareness of global food security are threatened by looming losses due to climate change, according to a study published in The Lancet. Marco Springmann et al. calculate that climate change will lead to a 3.2 percent reduction in global food availability per person by 2050, driven by changes in weather patterns, increasing frequency of extreme weather, and potential social disruptions to food production like disease and conflict.

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  • Innovative Sludge-to-Energy Plant Makes a Breakthrough in China

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    China Environment Forum  //  May 31, 2016  //  By Coco Liu

    XIANGYANG, China – This factory located in a quiet island of central China’s Xiangyang city probably won’t grab your attention. Its stainless steel complex and three-story office building look similar to any other. But don’t be fooled by appearances. The plant here holds a secret that has lured more than 100 Chinese mayors to pay their respects and uncover how they can replicate its success.

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  • When Climate Change Exacerbates Conflict, Women Pay the Price, Says Mayesha Alam

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    Friday Podcasts  //  May 13, 2016  //  By Sean Peoples

    alam-small2Climate change has the potential to exacerbate conflict and political instability, and women will pay a steeper price than their male counterparts when it does, says Mayesha Alam, associate director of the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace, and Security, in this week’s podcast.

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  • Feeding the Future? A Closer Look at U.S. Agricultural Assistance in Tanzania

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    May 11, 2016  //  By Haodan "Heather" Chen
    Tanzania food market

    Between 2010 and 2015, Tanzania received more than $320 million in assistance via the U.S. government’s Feed the Future Initiative – the most of any country. But despite these commitments and an average of six to seven percent annual economic growth since 2000, Tanzania did not meet the first Millennium Development Goal: to reduce hunger and extreme poverty by half by the end of 2015.

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  • Why Do Land Grabs Happen? Because They Can

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    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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  • Pathways to Resilience: Evidence on Links Between Conflict Management, Natural Resources, and Food Security

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    From the Wilson Center  //  April 26, 2016  //  By Gracie Cook
    food for peace

    In 2015, the NGO Mercy Corps released some surprising findings from conflict management programs in the Horn of Africa. Interventions from 2013 to 2015 focused on building community-level cooperation, strengthening institutions, and enhancing resilience. The results indicate that natural resource management can be a key governance pillar to build around and that such cooperation can strengthen household resilience to climate and food security shocks. [Video Below]

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  • Carlos Manuel Rodriguez, Human Nature

    Murders of Environmental Activists Reflect Chronic Clashes Over Resource Use

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    April 4, 2016  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Berta-Caceres-rally

    The original version of this article, by Nancy Lindborg, appeared on Conservation International’s Human Nature blog.

    When I heard of the horrific murder of Berta Cáceres, a Honduran environmental activist who had spent years fighting to protect her community’s traditional lands, I was shocked – though perhaps I shouldn’t have been.

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