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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category development.
  • USAID Launches New Water, Conflict, and Peacebuilding Toolkit

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    From the Wilson Center  //  April 8, 2014  //  By Moses Jackson
    afghanistan_water

    With almost 800 million people currently lacking access to clean water and two-thirds of the world’s population projected to face conditions of severe water stress by 2025, disputes over water are a growing global concern. But while dwindling water supplies sharpen focus on conflict, long-term peacebuilding opportunities are often overlooked. [Video Below]

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  • High Food Prices an Unlikely Cause for the Start of the Arab Spring

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    April 7, 2014  //  By Richard Cincotta
    Tunisian_flag

    Just months after popular uprisings toppled Tunisia and Egypt’s authoritarian regimes, a trio of complex-system researchers published a brief article linking these demonstrations with high levels of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization’s international Food Price Index. Marco Lagi, Karla Bertrand, and Yaneer Bar-Yam’s model, which predicts outbreaks of deadly social conflict when the index tops 210, has since become a popular explanation wielded by many for bouts of popular unrest, including the Arab Spring and overthrow of Ukraine’s government. But were food prices really an underlying “hidden” cause for the start of a wave of instability that is still being felt today?

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  • John Pielemeier: Population, Health, and Environment Programs Need to Prove It Before Becoming Mainstream

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    Friday Podcasts  //  April 4, 2014  //  By Paris Achenbach
    pielemeier_small

    A new model of integrated development, combining population, health and environment (PHE) interventions, is efficient, effective, and relatively inexpensive. But more rigorous program evaluations are necessary to prove its value, argues John Pielemeier in this week’s podcast.

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  • For Maternal Health, What Role Will Universal Health Coverage Play in a Post-MDG World?

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  April 3, 2014  //  By Katrina Braxton
    Nepal_clinic

    The global maternal health agenda has been largely defined by the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) for the last decade and half, but what will happen after they expire in 2015? What kind of framework is needed to continue the momentum towards eliminating preventable maternal deaths and morbidities? [Video Below]

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  • Uttarakhand’s Furious Himalayan Flood Could Bury India’s Hydropower Program

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    Choke Point  //  April 2, 2014  //  By Keith Schneider
    uttarakhand_flood1

    Despite the inherent risks, India is determined to join China, Bhutan, Nepal, and Pakistan in turning the Himalayas into the Saudi Arabia of hydroelectric energy. Almost 300 big hydropower projects are under construction or proposed for India’s five Himalayan states, according to the Central Electric Authority.

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  • New Film Explains Blue Ventures’ Integrated Approach to Development and Conservation in Madagascar

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    Eye On  //  April 1, 2014  //  By Kate Diamond

    Blue Ventures has become a leader in the population, health, and environment (PHE) community through its work with the remote, semi-nomadic Vezo people living along Madagascar’s southwestern coast. In a new short documentary, The Freedom to Choose: Empowering Communities to Live With the Sea, Blue Ventures describes how their approach has helped the Vezo respond to the combined challenges of resource scarcity, poor reproductive health, and unsustainable livelihoods.

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  • Mapping China’s Dam Rush – and the Environmental Consequences

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    China Environment Forum  //  Eye On  //  April 1, 2014  //  By Luan "Jonathan" Dong
    dams-feature-thumb
    To see the full bilingual interactive map, visit WilsonCenter.org.

    In southwestern China, three parallel rivers – the Nu, Lancang, and Jinsha (also known as the Upper Mekong, Salween, and Yangtze, respectively) – form a series of corridors that connect the tropical rainforests of Southeast Asia to the Tibetan Plateau. These areas are some of the most biodiverse in the world, and scientists argue they have value as “climate refugia” – places worth preserving in order to allow species to retreat to cooler, more suitable climates as temperatures rise. A cascade of dams, however, has been planned for the region, threatening to submerge habitats, reduce the flow of tributary rivers, and make the area less suitable for many plant and animal species.

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  • Kathleen Mogelgaard: Four Steps to Better Link Climate Adaptation and Reproductive Health Strategies

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    Friday Podcasts  //  March 28, 2014  //  By Paris Achenbach

    mogelgaard_small

    Climate change vulnerability is closely tied to population dynamics, says Kathleen Mogelgaard in this week’s podcast. “We know that population size, composition and spatial distribution around the world is constantly changing, and that these changes do have implications for climate change exposure, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity – the three elements of vulnerability.”

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