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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category featured.
  • Harvesting Peace: Food Security, Conflict, and Cooperation (Report Launch)

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  October 9, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass
    harvesting peace

    In the wake of food riots in more than 30 countries in 2008 and the Arab Spring, in which food prices played an instigating role, the relationship between food security and instability demands a closer examination. “There is a lot of data on conflict, and a lot of data on food security, but it’s rarely brought together,” said Emmy Simmons, the author of the latest edition of ECSP Report. [Video Below]

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  • African Leaders Urge Action to Meet (and Succeed) MDG 5

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    Dot-Mom  //  October 8, 2013  //  By Laurie Mazur
    MDG-5-meeting

    As world leaders gathered at the UN for a special event on achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) last month, there was much to celebrate. Some of the MDG targets – on poverty reduction and safe drinking water, for example – have been reached ahead of the 2015 deadline. But on MDG 5, which addresses maternal mortality and reproductive health, progress lags shamefully behind.

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  • 10 Steps for Expanding the Population, Health, and Environment Approach

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    Beat on the Ground  //  From the Wilson Center  //  October 7, 2013  //  By Laura Henson
    PHE-10-steps

    As their five-year funding cycle for supporting integrated population, health, and environment (PHE) programs around the world came to a close this fall, leaders from BALANCED Project – Building Actors and Leaders for Advancing Community Excellence in Development – came together at the Wilson Center to discuss lessons learned, best practices, and new ideas for the future.

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  • Africa’s Demography, Environment, Security Challenges Entwined, Says Roger-Mark De Souza at Africa Center for Strategic Studies

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    Eye On  //  October 3, 2013  //  By Donald Borenstein

    Sub-Saharan Africa is not only the fastest growing region of the world demographically but is also one of the most vulnerable to climate changes, according to many measures, and already facing natural resource scarcity in many areas. These factors combine with existing development challenges to create security threats that African governments and the United States should be concerned with, says ECSP Director Roger-Mark De Souza in a presentation for the Africa Center for Strategic Studies’ introductory course on demography and the environment at the National Defense University.

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  • Five Years of Population, Health, and Environment Programs: What Works and What’s Next?

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  September 26, 2013  //  By Laura Henson
    mahija_BALANCED

    More than 20 percent of the world’s population live in ecological hotspots, places rich in biodiversity but often lacking basic government services. Population, health, and environment – or PHE – programs address compounding stresses in these areas by helping to meet people’s needs for basic health services, including reproductive health care; promoting food security and poverty reduction; and teaching sustainable natural resource management. [Video Below]

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  • China’s Environmental Crisis Through the Lens: Interview With Photojournalist Sean Gallagher

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    China Environment Forum  //  September 24, 2013  //  By Susan Chan Shifflett
    deserts

    China is one of the world’s 12 “mega-biodiversity” countries, but its incredible natural landscapes, from Sichuan’s sparkling, turquoise-colored lakes to Guilin’s dramatic karst topography, are bearing the cost of rapid economic development, writes British environmental photojournalist and videographer Sean Gallagher in a new multimedia e-book.

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  • Religion and Reproductive Rights: Looking For Common Ground

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    From the Wilson Center  //  September 23, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass
    Faith-and-Rights-Photo

    More than 84 percent of the 2010 world population – 5.8 billion people – consider themselves religiously affiliated, according to a recent study. Religious leaders can therefore have significant influence across a broad range of social, economic, and political issues. Perhaps nowhere is that influence felt more strongly than in debates about reproductive health and rights, and perhaps nowhere are the consequences so large than in poor and marginalized communities.

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  • To Build Peace, Confront Afghanistan’s Natural Resource Paradox

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    Guest Contributor  //  September 16, 2013  //  By Shamim Niazi
    UNEP_Afghanistan_NRM_guidan

    There’s a popular saying in Afghanistan reflecting the value of water: “Let Kabul be without gold, but not without snow.”

    Living in a refugee camp across the border in Pakistan during the Soviet occupation, my father, who worked as a doctor in Samangan, Bamyan, Kunar, and Balkh provinces, used to tell me about the importance of our country’s natural wealth. He was optimistic that it was Afghanistan’s land, water, forests, and minerals that would help the country re-emerge as a strong nation. However, he also knew that the mismanagement of our natural resources is partly to blame for the instability, insecurity, and vulnerability that have gripped our country for so many years. This is the paradox of the natural resource wealth in Afghanistan.

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