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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category population.
  • Kaja Jurczynska, All Access

    In Pakistan, More Questions Than Answers When It Comes to Family Planning

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    April 9, 2014  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    pakistan-clinic

    The original version of this article, by Kaja Jurczynska, appeared on Population Action International’s All Access blog.

    Imagine you’re a woman living in Pakistan who would like to decide if and when to have children. You’re going to school, or you’ve got a job, or you’ve had a child and simply want some space before your next pregnancy. How easy will it be for you to get your needs met?

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  • John Pielemeier: Population, Health, and Environment Programs Need to Prove It Before Becoming Mainstream

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    Friday Podcasts  //  April 4, 2014  //  By Paris Achenbach
    pielemeier_small

    A new model of integrated development, combining population, health and environment (PHE) interventions, is efficient, effective, and relatively inexpensive. But more rigorous program evaluations are necessary to prove its value, argues John Pielemeier in this week’s podcast.

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  • New Film Explains Blue Ventures’ Integrated Approach to Development and Conservation in Madagascar

    ›
    Eye On  //  April 1, 2014  //  By Kate Diamond

    Blue Ventures has become a leader in the population, health, and environment (PHE) community through its work with the remote, semi-nomadic Vezo people living along Madagascar’s southwestern coast. In a new short documentary, The Freedom to Choose: Empowering Communities to Live With the Sea, Blue Ventures describes how their approach has helped the Vezo respond to the combined challenges of resource scarcity, poor reproductive health, and unsustainable livelihoods.

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  • Kathleen Mogelgaard: Four Steps to Better Link Climate Adaptation and Reproductive Health Strategies

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    Friday Podcasts  //  March 28, 2014  //  By Paris Achenbach
    mogelgaard_small

    Climate change vulnerability is closely tied to population dynamics, says Kathleen Mogelgaard in this week’s podcast. “We know that population size, composition and spatial distribution around the world is constantly changing, and that these changes do have implications for climate change exposure, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity – the three elements of vulnerability.”

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  • In Nepal, Integrating Forest and Family Health Is Improving Lives

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    March 24, 2014  //  By Sean Peoples
    ScalingtheMountain1

    For years, the Chepang people have lived off the land in Nepal’s forested central foothills. Communities cleared trees to start small subsistence farms, harvested the surrounding area for firewood, and eventually moved on after the wood, soil, and water were depleted.

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  • Measurement Matters: Understanding Water Scarcity in an Increasingly Complex World

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    March 21, 2014  //  By Kathleen Mogelgaard
    WWD_measurement

    It was a scorching hot April afternoon in Keur Moussa, a small farming community about 60 kilometers outside Dakar, Senegal. The landscape was mostly barren and very dry, and a fine red dust settled into our clothes as we walked with community leaders to learn about their efforts to cope with a changing environment. In this part of the world, adapting to climate change is figuring out how to manage water: how to survive for long periods without it, and what to do when too much comes at unexpected times.

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  • Big Changes Need Big Stories: The Year Ahead in Environment and Energy Reporting

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    From the Wilson Center  //  On the Beat  //  March 17, 2014  //  By Donald Borenstein
    Rhine_coal_mine3

    While climate change has enjoyed a recent spike in news coverage, journalists face a constant challenge to bring sustained attention to other environmental stories, including resource scarcity, the changing oceans, and demographic change. [Video Below]

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  • Deepa Pullanikkatil: Climate Adaptation Efforts Reveal Health-Environment Links in Malawi

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    Friday Podcasts  //  March 14, 2014  //  By Moses Jackson
    deepa_small

    Effective development interventions often require thinking outside the box. In southern Malawi’s Lake Chilwa basin, where environmental degradation, public health, and population dynamics intersect in unpredictable ways, people like Deepa Pullanikkatil of Leadership for Environment and Development (LEAD) are challenging conventional thinking with promising results.

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