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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category featured.
  • From the Pacific to the Atlantic, Protecting Coastal Communities From Climate Threats

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    From the Wilson Center  //  November 13, 2017  //  By Julianne Liebenguth
    Children-Surf

    The frontlines of climate change are the world’s shorelines. “It goes without saying that people living in coastal communities are already observing impacts,” said Erin Derrington, a coastal resources specialist working in the Northern Mariana Islands, at a recent Wilson Center event, the third in a series on coastal resilience presented in collaboration with the Hoover Institute and the Stanford Woods Institute on the Environment. “Although that is a challenge, it is also an opportunity and a driver for change and innovation,” said Derrington.

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  • Innovations in Midwifery Save Mothers’ Lives: Q&A With Geeta Lal

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    Dot-Mom  //  Q&A  //  November 9, 2017  //  By Yuval Cohen
    Geeta-Lal

    To prevent maternal mortality, we need new approaches to this very old problem. The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)’s Midwifery Programme, which operates in 120 countries, recently launched an innovative tool to improve training for maternal health workers. Dot-Mom, the column of the Maternal Health Initiative on New Security Beat, recently spoke with Geeta Lal, global coordinator for the Midwifery Programme, about the challenges of developing innovations in maternal health and new projects on the horizon for UNFPA. 

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  • Alice Hill: Invest in Resilience to Manage Future Risks to Economy, Security

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    From the Wilson Center  //  November 8, 2017  //  By Gretchen Johnson

    As our climate changes, “we are vulnerable to unacceptable risks of failures in functionality, durability, and safety,” said Alice C. Hill, former senior director for resiliency policy for the National Security Council, as she launched Resilience Week at the Wilson Center. During the week, members of the UN Resilience Academy joined representatives from the Wilson Center, Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment and the Hoover Institute for in-depth discussions on building global resilience in the face of environmental change. “Resilience is proving necessary to withstand the disruptions to our very interconnected systems,” she said.

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  • A Toxic Legacy: Remediating Pollution in Iraq

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    Guest Contributor  //  November 6, 2017  //  By Wim Zwijnenburg

    As the so-called Islamic State loses control over the areas it once occupied, it is leaving behind a toxic legacy.  The initial findings of a scoping mission undertaken by UN Environment Programme’s Conflict and Disasters branch found a trail of localized pollution that could have acute and chronic consequences for Iraq—and not just for its environment.

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  • Unequal Women, Insecure World: The State of the World’s Population in the Age of Inequality

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    Guest Contributor  //  November 3, 2017  //  By Jennifer Dabbs Sciubba
    Mother-with-Child

    Women in Madagascar are scrambling to access contraception—while they still can. By the end of this year, one of the most prominent organizations that provides family planning services in the country will have shut down 21 of its 22 mobile contraception clinics, an important service in a country where transportation and roads are in poor shape.

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  • Cities at COP-23: Q&A With WRI’s Ani Dasgupta

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    Q&A  //  November 3, 2017  //  By Julianne Liebenguth
    Solar-Street-Lights

    To meet the climate challenge, city leaders are committing to ambitious emissions targets, designing decentralized action plans, and sharing lessons in transnational networks. Since growing cities are a large source of global emissions, their efforts could contribute substantially to global climate objectives. As the world’s climate experts gather next week in Bonn, Germany, for the 23rd Conference of the Parties (COP-23), urban initiatives will be a key focal point of the agenda-setting conversation.

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  • An Unholy Trinity: Xinjiang’s Unhealthy Relationship With Coal, Water, and the Quest for Development

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    China Environment Forum  //  November 1, 2017  //  By Meredith Peng

    A desert road near Kuqa. Photo credit Meredith Peng, 2016.

    Sitting shotgun in a beat-up vehicle en route to Tashkorgan a small town in the western Chinese province of Xinjiang, I soaked in the magnificence—or what I could see through the dust-coated windshield. The unpaved and rocky road, which carves through the precipitous Karakorum pass, will be (when finished) a key link in China’s “One Belt One Road”  plan to connect China to Pakistan. China’s ambitious plans for westward expansion will demand an almost inconceivably enormous amount of energy and resources, and water-scarce Xinjiang will play a central role. With plans like these, how can China meet its water needs?

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  • Fire Warning: From India to California, Change Fuels the Flames

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    October 31, 2017  //  By Arundhati Ponnapa
    California-Fire-Damage

    Earlier this month, more than 40 people perished and 20,000 people were ordered to evacuate as Northern California faced some of its deadliest fires in decades. Potentially fueled by climate change, these fires—only the only the latest in a string of fires to strike the state—will reshape landscapes and lives, as I know well from personal experience on the other side of the world.

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