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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category featured.
  • To Realize the Demographic Dividend in Africa, Countries Must Fight Corruption

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    Guest Contributor  //  May 16, 2018  //  By Diana Warira
    34216799584_198130ea1a_k

    Today, African leaders agree that Africa has a great opportunity to reap economic benefits from strategic investments made in the continent’s current large youthful population. The “demographic dividend” is the accelerated economic growth that can result from improved reproductive health, a rapid decline in fertility, and the subsequent shift in population age structure. With more people in the labor force and fewer children to support, a country has a window of opportunity—but only if the right social and economic investments and policies are made in health, education, governance, and the economy. 

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  • Where Are All The Men? Faith-Based Efforts to Engage Men and Boys in HIV Prevention Services

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  May 15, 2018  //  By Yuval Cohen
    14992424874_75e0a82312_o

    In sub-Saharan Africa, “more than half of the men under the age of 35 do not know their [HIV] status and are not on treatment,” said Dr. Sean Cavanaugh of the Office of the Global AIDS Coordinator at a recent Wilson Center event on engaging the faith community in reaching young men and boys with HIV prevention services.  Consequently, men often don’t seek HIV services promptly, decreasing their rates of antiretroviral therapy and viral suppression, and increasing HIV mortality rates.

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  • China’s Ready to Cash In on a Melting Arctic

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    China Environment Forum  //  May 10, 2018  //  By Sherri Goodman & Lyssa Freese
    Xue_Long,_Fremantle,_2016_(11)-1

    This article by Sherri Goodman and Lyssa Freese originally appeared in Foreign Policy.

    Put simply, “the damn thing melted,” Navy Secretary Richard Spencer explained in recent testimony, referring to Arctic ice melt as the trigger for the new U.S. Navy Arctic Strategy that is to be released this summer. What the Navy planned as a 16-year road map is in need of updates after only four years, in part due to receding polar ice caps, which are “opening new trade routes, exposing new resources, and redrawing continental maps,” but also in part due to the rise of China as an “Arctic stakeholder” and increasing important player in the region.

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  • Serious Games: Conservation and Community

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    From the Wilson Center  //  May 9, 2018  //  By Brittany Williams
    Calamity

    In preparation for the Wilson Center’s Earth Challenge 2020 initiative, the Serious Games Initiative rounded up educational games with themes of conservation and community. These games tackle issues ranging from community resilience to dystopian futures—and everything in between. While not a comprehensive list of environmental games, we hope it inspires you to check out these games and think of ideas for new ones that might use data from the upcoming Earth Challenge 2020 hackathons.

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  • New Global Analysis Finds Water-Related Terrorism Is On the Rise

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    Guest Contributor  //  May 8, 2018  //  By Jennifer Veilleux & Shlomi Dinar
    Water Collection Somalia

    In 2014, after losing a number of Somalian cities it had captured to African Union and Somali troops, the terrorist group Al-Shabaab changed its tactics. To demonstrate its continued power and presence, Al-Shabaab cut off water supplies to its formerly held cities. Residents from these cut-off cities were forced to fetch water from nearby towns, many of which Al-Shabaab controlled. But the terror group prevented anyone living in government-controlled territory from entering, which increased people’s frustration with the government.

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  • A Ukrainian Stand-Off: The Toxic Consequences of Armed Conflict in Donbass

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    Guest Contributor  //  May 7, 2018  //  By Wim Zwijnenburg
    IMAG0237
    Toxic waste pond near the village of Novhorodske burning after being hit by a shell in August 2014. (Source: Evgeniy Didus, Director of the Phenol Factory)

    A looming industrial tower of pipelines and chemical storage tanks rises out of snowy landscape. In Novogorodske, a small quiet town in eastern Ukraine, workers go about their daily business at the Dzerzhinsk Phenol Factory. A penetrating, inescapable smell greeted us as we entered the village, which a Dutch journalist and I are visiting as part of our investigation into the environmental and health risks from ongoing fighting in Eastern Ukraine. Our research for the open-source collective Bellingcat has identified the factory as one of a number of potential environmental flashpoints.

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  • Halvard Buhaug: Climate Changes Affect Conflict Dynamics

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    Friday Podcasts  //  May 4, 2018  //  By Benjamin Dills

    Buhaug-235“Climate is unquestionably linked to armed conflict,” says Halvard Buhaug, Research Professor at the Peace Research Institute Oslo, in the latest Wilson Center podcast.

    “If we produce a map of the world with locations of ongoing and recently entered armed conflicts, and we superimpose on that map different climate zones or climatic regions, we would very easily see a distinct clustering pattern of armed conflicts in warmer climates.”

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  • The Blockchain Revolution: Q&A with Kaikai Yang

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    China Environment Forum  //  May 3, 2018  //  By Qinqi Dai
    solar panel

    Blockchain, the newest technology poised to revolutionize numerous industries, could help decentralize electricity systems across Asia, Europe, Australia and the United States. In Brooklyn, peer-to-peer microgrids allow prosumers—energy consumers who generate small amounts of electricity from renewable sources—to trade energy with other users. Blockchain technology provides distributed ledgers that validate, record, and share each transaction, using smart contracts that automatically execute energy trades when the price and volume of the electricity transaction meet the contracted requirements.

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