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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category environment.
  • Not Enough to Go Around? Tensions Over Land Threaten to Boil Over in Burundi

    ›
    On the Beat  //  April 7, 2015  //  By Schuyler Null
    Burundi

    “Alphonse, however, had not come to talk. Without saying a word, he raised a machete and brought it down onto his uncle’s skull.”

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  • High Stakes: Understanding Risk and Why This Year’s Climate Negotiations Are So Important

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  April 6, 2015  //  By Theo Wilson
    Darfur

    Expectations for the upcoming UN climate change summit in Paris are higher than they’ve been in years. Experts expect it will be the best chance to achieve a binding, universal agreement to limit carbon emissions. But the conference is still not getting the attention it deserves from policymakers and the public, given the stakes – and not just for the environment but for the international system writ large, said Nick Mabey, founding director and chief executive of the UK-based environmental NGO E3G at the Wilson Center on February 12.

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  • “A Once in a Generation Moment”: Manish Bapna on the Sustainable Development Goals

    ›
    Friday Podcasts  //  April 3, 2015  //  By Theo Wilson
    bapna-small

    “The thing that is most gripping about the SDGs is their desire to be much more transformative in terms of what they mean for the planet,” says Manish Bapna, executive vice president and managing director of the World Resources Institute, in this week’s podcast.

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  • Jack A. Goldstone, CNN

    Yemen’s Collapse a Result of Systematic Failures, U.S. Neglect

    ›
    April 2, 2015  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Yemen-streets

    The original version of this article, by Jack A. Goldstone, appeared on CNN.

    It shouldn’t come as a surprise that Yemen has collapsed – again. A country that has split and been pulled together before, has the youngest and fastest growing population in the region, is running low on oil and water, and possesses a “personalist” government rather than stable institutions, was on the top of every expert’s list as the fragile state most likely to fail next.

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  • Syria Conflict’s Connection to Climate Change, and Avoiding Maladaptation to “Hydro-Climate” Risks

    ›
    Reading Radar  //  April 1, 2015  //  By Theo Wilson

    PNASIn a headline–making article in the journal PNAS, Colin P. Kelley et al. write there is evidence that the ongoing conflict in Syria, which has killed at least 200,000, was triggered by climate change. Severe drought from 2007 to 2010 caused a massive rural-to-urban demographic shift which exacerbated pre-existing sociopolitical tensions in Syrian cities already inundated with Iraqi refugees.

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  • Big Money, Big Politics, and Big Infrastructure: Florida’s Saga Illustrates Climate Change’s Deep Challenges

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  March 31, 2015  //  By Katrina Schwartz
    sunny-day-flooding

    Investigative journalists reported earlier this month that top appointees at Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection and other state agencies ordered employees not to use the terms “climate change” or “global warming” in official communications. Politically coded euphemisms such as “climate drivers” and “climate variability” were to be used instead. “Sea-level rise” was to be replaced with “nuisance flooding.” The news swiftly went viral, with commentators noting the irony of such censorship occurring in Florida – essentially ground zero for climate change in the Global North.

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  • China’s Water-Energy-Food Roadmap: A New Global Choke Point Report

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  Choke Point  //  March 30, 2015  //  By Susan Chan Shifflett
    roadmap_thumb

    The creation of a water-energy research initiative in the landmark U.S.-China climate agreement last fall could be the beginning of a new and different path for Sino-U.S. collaboration.

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  • The U.S. Energy Pivot: A New Era for Energy Security in Asia?

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  March 26, 2015  //  By Qinnan Zhou
    industrial_plant_korea

    The past decade has brought ground-shaking changes to global energy markets. The unconventional fuel boom has unexpectedly reduced U.S. dependence on oil imports, while in the Asia-Pacific region, energy-constrained nations are increasingly reliant on foreign sources to meet their soaring demand. With the U.S. slated to export liquid natural gas (LNG) to Asia as early as 2017, a new energy era has come.

    MORE
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