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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category livelihoods.
  • Africa Can Help Feed Africa: Removing Regional Barriers to Trade in Food Staples

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    From the Wilson Center  //  March 14, 2013  //  By Derek Langford

    We need to understand why barriers to trade exist in order to alleviate the food insecurity that confronts Africa, said Makhtar Diop, World Bank vice president for Africa, at the Wilson Center in January.

    The World Bank released a new report in October 2012 that is part of a series that concentrates on intraregional trade. Africa Can Help Feed Africa: Removing Regional Barriers to Trade in Food Staples, however, is unique, Diop said, because it “moves the focus from general barriers to trade in Africa to focus on food,” so that policymakers can move away from crisis response and address food insecurity at a base level. [Video Below]

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  • International Women’s Day: Violence Pervasive, With Wide-Ranging Effects

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    March 8, 2013  //  By Kate Diamond

    The theme of this year’s International Women’s Day is “a promise is a promise: time for action to end violence against women.” The theme reflects that although there are a number of treaties and conventions that on paper promise to protect women’s rights, equality, and security, in reality, those promises to protect human rights have been broken time and again.

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  • Sam Eaton Describes Population-Food-Environment Links in Rural Philippines

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    Friday Podcasts  //  March 1, 2013  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    In this podcast, journalist Sam Eaton describes the process of producing two pieces that aired on Marketplace and NewsHour last year on the connection between population, the environment, and food security in the Philippines. Eaton visited the rural village of Humayhumay where PATH Foundation Philippines, Inc., has a pilot program distributing contraceptives and teaching community members about conservation and sustainable livelihoods. Although Eaton said he was at first hesitant to tackle such an “abstract concept” as integrated population, health, and environment development, he found on the ground that it had “all the elements of a good story” and there were tangible benefits visible within the community. Eaton discussed his reporting at the Wilson Center on January 28.

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  • The Other Migration Story in Mexico: Climate Change

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    From the Wilson Center  //  February 26, 2013  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    The conversation around immigration and Mexico has long been tied to the United States and the prevailing economic conditions in both countries. But a new report from the Royal United Services Institute argues that as temperatures rise and precipitation patterns change over the course of the next century, climate too will increasingly become a driver of both internal and international migration in Mexico. [Video Below]

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  • Fishing for Families: Reporting on Population and Food Security in the Philippines

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    From the Wilson Center  //  On the Beat  //  February 11, 2013  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    “My income is just right to feed us three times a day,” Jason Bostero told Sam Eaton in the rural Philippine village of Humayhumay. “It’s really, really different when you have a small family.” Eaton traveled to the Philippines to report on the connections between food security and population for Homelands Productions, creating a short film and radio piece that ran on NewsHour and Marketplace as part the Food for Nine Billion series last year. [Video Below]

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  • Behind the Numbers

    Reproductive Health and Population Issues in the MDGs: An Interview With Stan Bernstein

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    February 8, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article appeared on the Population Reference Bureau’s Behind the Numbers blog.

    Stan Bernstein, a retired UNFPA senior policy adviser and former health adviser on the UN Millennium Project, recently attended the Seventh Annual Research Conference on Population, Reproductive Health, and Economic Development in Oslo, Norway. During the conference, Bernstein reflected on the presence of reproductive health and population issues among the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and their indicators. He also commented on prospects for including relevant reproductive health and population goals or indicators in the development agenda beyond 2015. Bernstein hailed the role of research from the PopPov network in the past and its potential contributions to future development agendas. He answers some questions for PRB below.

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  • Setting Development Goals for Population Dynamics and Reproductive Rights

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    From the Wilson Center  //  January 30, 2013  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    “I’d like to start by stating emphatically that since addressing global inequality and inequity are our overall principles in revising the MDGs [Millennium Development Goals], we must focus on health inequities to have a meaningful and lasting impact on human development,” said Beth Schlachter of the State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration, speaking at the Wilson Center on January 9. “And for the most vulnerable – women and girls – that means we must focus on sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights.” [Video Below]

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  • A Kingdom’s Future: Saudi Arabia Through the Eyes of Its Twentysomethings

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    From the Wilson Center  //  January 25, 2013  //  By Schuyler Null

    In a new book from the Wilson Center, Caryle Murphy asks how, while its neighbors face revolutions, Saudi Arabia has been able to “weather the storm of Arab youth discontent seemingly unscathed.”

    To find out, Murphy went to the source, interviewing 83 young Saudis between the ages of 19 and 29 in the spring of 2012. She found that “they are by no means a revolutionary lot, preferring gradual, step-by-step change. They want change, but not at the cost of safety and security. Most favor more tolerance for diversity, including in the realm of religion.”

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