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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category featured.
  • Perception Matters: New Insights Into What Determines Resilience

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  June 27, 2016  //  By Christophe Béné
    accra

    Resilience is increasingly recognized as a powerful concept to help practitioners, academics, and policymakers better understand how people respond to shocks and stressors, and how those responses can be linked to longer-term positive or negative development outcomes, such as wellbeing or food (in)security.

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  • In Sustainable Development and Conflict Resolution, Women Seeing Larger Roles

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    From the Wilson Center  //  June 22, 2016  //  By Adrienne Bober
    burkina faso2

    It used to be a luxury to talk about the environment when you were addressing conflict. Today, “we recognize it’s not a luxury anymore,” said Liz Hume, senior director for programs at the Alliance for Peacebuilding, at the Wilson Center on April 29. Similarly, gender dynamics are now being recognized as playing a critical role in sustainable development and peacebuilding. [Video Below]

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  • In Cities, the New Battlefield for Sustainable Development, Women and Girls Need Help

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 21, 2016  //  By Daniela Ligiero
    Palermo

    Last month, the world came to Copenhagen to focus on how to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for girls and women. The Women Deliver Conference, the largest gathering on girls’ and women’s health and rights in the last decade, was a huge success. Convening over 5,700 likeminded people from 169 countries was important to reenergize the movement and inspire action. Preaching to the converted is sometimes important. But now it’s time to focus on those who are not yet converted.

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  • Why East Africa’s Refugee Crises Can No Longer Be Ignored

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    From the Wilson Center  //  June 20, 2016  //  By Evie Kirschke-Schwartz
    Dadaab2

    Citing security concerns, the government of Kenya recently announced their intent to close the world’s largest refugee complex, Dadaab, after almost 25 years. [Video Below]

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  • New Approaches to Addressing Gender Inequality in Global Development

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    From the Wilson Center  //  June 15, 2016  //  By Sreya Panuganti
    delali association

    In principle, development organizations and donors have known that gender dynamics affect the success or failure of their efforts for some time. In practice, overturning cultural mores while at the same time improving health outcomes, incomes, or food security can be difficult. [Video Below]

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  • Four Cattle and a Farm: On Finding More Inclusive Solutions to Climate Change

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 14, 2016  //  By Laura Stewart
    Cousins2

    As early as 1911, coal miners in Britain carried caged canaries into mining pits. Any sign of distress from the small birds, which are incredibly sensitive to the presence of harmful gases such as carbon monoxide, meant immediate evacuation. Today’s canaries in the coal mine are low-income, minority communities whose exposure to environmental risks in the United States and elsewhere puts them at the frontlines of the global climate crisis.

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  • Singapore and the Climate Dilemma: There’s No Way to Go it Alone

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 13, 2016  //  By Nick Mabey
    singapore-storm

    Anyone visiting Singapore, as I did recently, quickly realizes it is exceptional. A tiny, rich, stable city-state of nearly 6 million people perched uneasily in a region of sprawling mega-countries full of poverty and instability, it also a thriving free market trading and financial center that is meticulously planned and where 80 percent of people live in public housing.

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  • Global Population and Reproductive Health (Book Preview)

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 8, 2016  //  By Deborah R. McFarlane
    Somalia Hospital1

    Population, reproductive health, and environmental sustainability are inextricably linked. Growing populations place increasing demands on the environment, while meeting the reproductive health needs of populations usually slows their growth. Often, however, policymakers, scholars, and journalists discuss these issues separately, as if unrelated.

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