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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category *Main.
  • World AIDS Day: Center Women and Girls to Eradicate AIDS

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    Dot-Mom  //  November 27, 2024  //  By Deekshita Ramanarayanan

    Over the last four decades, contracting HIV has been transformed from a fatal diagnosis to a manageable chronic illness. Political will and financial commitments have reduced new HIV infections worldwide by 39 percent since 2010. However, much work still is needed to meet global targets of preventing new cases of HIV and reducing AIDS-related deaths. Marginalized communities, including women and girls, face countless barriers which hinder progress towards comprehensive HIV prevention across the planet.

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  • Confronting Pronatalism is Essential for Reproductive Justice and Ecological Sustainability

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    Guest Contributor  //  November 26, 2024  //  By Nandita Bajaj

    Pronatalism, the push for women to have more children, has elbowed its way into prominence in public discourse. In the United States, cultural and institutional pressures on women to bear children are articulated in various ways, from negative portrayals of women who don’t consider having a child a viable choice for themselves, to a burgeoning Silicon Valley subculture that advocates having “tons of kids” to save the world, to policy proposals that would further restrict reproductive choice or limit the voting power of the childless. The stigmatization of people without children and the recent rise in contemporary pronatalism is a global phenomenon.

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  • The 2024 Montreal Climate Security Summit: Four Takeaways

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    Eye On  //  November 25, 2024  //  By Claire Doyle

    “I think we need to approach climate security completely differently,” said Sharon Burke, Founder and President of Ecospherics and Wilson Center Global Fellow, at the recent 2024 Montreal Climate Security Summit. “It’s not just that climate change is an opportunity cost in combat power, or that it’s effecting our bases and operating environment, or that it is an accelerant to instability. It is itself the threat.”

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch | November 18 – 22   

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    Eye On  //  November 22, 2024  //  By Neeraja Kulkarni

    A window into what we’re reading at the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change and Security Program 

    Over 40,000 Protest for Maori Rights in New Zealand (Al Jazeera) 

    Earlier this month, the libertarian ACT New Zealand party introduced the Treaty Principles Bill in that nation’s legislature. The controversial measure seeks to reinterpret the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi—a foundational document that granted Maori tribes broad land rights in return for ceding governance to the British. The treaty’s historical value remains significant to this day, and it is a contemporary reminder of the colonial injustices faced by the country’s native tribes.

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  • Swathi Veeravalli on the Importance of Climate Security for US Strategic Interests

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    New Security Broadcast  //  November 22, 2024  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    In today’s episode of New Security Broadcast, ECSP Program Director Lauren Risi sits down with Swathi Veeravalli on her last day as the Director for Climate Security and Adaptation at the National Security Council (NSC) to discuss the new US Framework for Climate Resilience and Security, its significance for the future of US security and economic interests, and what success in building climate security looks like over the next decade.

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  • Lights On or Off? Chinese Solar and Wind Companies in Sub-Saharan Africa

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    Africa in Transition  //  China and the Global Energy Transition  //  China Environment Forum  //  Guest Contributor  //  November 21, 2024  //  By Xiaokang Xue

    When I stepped into the bustling exhibition hall at Enlit Africa in Cape Town in May 2024, I was surprised by the riot of colorful banners featuring Chinese characters. A whopping 40% of the exhibitors at one of Africa’s largest energy and power conferences in Cape Town from China—more than any other country. 

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  • Essential and Overdue: Quality Care for Adolescent Mothers and First-Time Parents

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    Dot-Mom  //  November 20, 2024  //  By Consolata Chikoti

    Maternal health among adolescents in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) remains a largely unexplored and frequently neglected area within the public health field. Adolescent birth rates remain disproportionately high in LMICs, accounting for approximately 97% of all adolescent births globally. The prevalence of child marriage, poverty, gender-based violence, and limited access to and utilization of contraceptive methods all contribute to this startling statistic.

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  • Addressing Human-Wildlife Conflict in Ethiopia’s Protected Lands

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    Eye On  //  November 19, 2024  //  By Neeraja Kulkarni

    We are undoubtedly at the 11th hour for biodiversity. The World Wildlife Foundation recently reported that Earth saw a 70% drop in species populations over the last fifty years.

    As global leaders convened at COP16 in Cali, Colombia in late October and early November, many of the most pressing threats to biodiversity and pathways to improving governance effectiveness were on the agenda. This year’s conference theme—“Peace with Nature”—offered an impetus for a deeper dialogue on the conflict-biodiversity nexus, which included the work of “Peace@CBD”: a community of NGOs, institutions, and individuals that promotes relationships between nature, peace, and conflict.

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