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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category security.
  • Tapping the Potential of Displaced Young People in Urban Settings

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  January 4, 2013  //  By Payal Chandiramani

    “When young people claim their right to education and health – including sexual and reproductive health – they increase their opportunities to become a powerful force for economic development and positive change,” said Nicole Gaertner, of UN Refugee Agency and the U.S. Department of State, quoting Secretary of State Hilary Clinton at the Wilson Center on December 13. [Video Below]

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  • Ruth Greenspan Bell, Bloomberg News

    Global Warming Experts Should Think More About the Cold War

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    January 2, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article, by Ruth Greenspan Bell, appeared on Bloomberg News.

    Every year the United Nations convenes diplomats from more than 190 nations to negotiate a climate change treaty, and in many years negotiators go home with little more than the promise of another annual meeting.

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  • National Research Council Produces Climate and Security Analysis at Request of U.S. Intelligence Community

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    December 20, 2012  //  By Payal Chandiramani & Schuyler Null

    The CIA may have shut down its dedicated climate change center earlier this year, but a recently released report sponsored by the intelligence community reaffirms the deep connection between climate change and national security. New threats to U.S. national security – like increased food and water insecurity and more natural disasters requiring humanitarian assistance – have emerged as climate change creates unprecedented changes in the global environment.

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  • The Challenges of the 21st-Century City (Policy Brief)

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    From the Wilson Center  //  December 18, 2012  //  By Blair A. Ruble

    The Wilson Center Policy Briefs are a series of short analyses of critical global issues facing the next administration that will run until inauguration day.

    We live in a world that is different from that inhabited by our ancestors in many profound ways. Among the most important changes is that, for the first time, almost half of the world’s people live in cities. According to the United Nations, in 2008 the global urban population surpassed half of the world’s population of 6.7 billion compared with 13 percent a century ago and 3 percent a century before that. This trend will require profound changes in the way the U.S. government addresses everything from development policy to international security.

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  • Autumn Spanne, The Daily Climate

    Colombia’s Unexplored Cloud Forests Besieged by Climate Change, Development

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    December 13, 2012  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article, by Autumn Spanne, appeared on The Daily Climate.

    Five hours by truck and mule from the nearest town, a rumbling generator cuts through the silent night to power large spotlights as botanists crouch and kneel on large blue tarps spread across a cow pasture. It’s nearly midnight, and the team works urgently to describe every detail of the dozens of colorful orchids, ferns, and other exotic plants they have collected that day in Las Orquídeas National Park, one of the single most biologically diverse places on the planet.

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  • National Intelligence Council Releases ‘Global Trends 2030’: Prominent Roles Predicted for Demographic and Environmental Trends

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    December 11, 2012  //  By Schuyler Null & Kate Diamond

    “We are at a critical juncture in human history, which could lead to widely contrasting futures,” writes the chairman of the National Intelligence Council (NIC) Christopher Kojm in the council’s latest forward-looking quadrennial report, Global Trends 2030: Alternative Worlds, released yesterday.

    This year, principal author Mathew Burrows and his colleagues focus on a series of plausible global scenarios for the next 20 years and the trends or disruptions that may influence which play out. Among the most important factors in these projections are demography and the environment.

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  • ‘The Christian Science Monitor’ Explores the Global Water Crisis: Should We Charge More for Water?

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    On the Beat  //  December 6, 2012  //  By Schuyler Null

    “There is as much of that water on the planet today as when the first amphibian flopped ashore; as much as when the ancient Greeks divined the future in the babble of brooks,” writes William Wheeler in The Christian Science Monitor. “So why do experts in science, economics, and development warn that a ‘global water crisis’ threatens the stability of nations and the health of billions?”

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  • Does Climate Change Kill Five Million People A Year? DARA’s 2012 Climate Vulnerability Monitor

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    November 27, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere & Schuyler Null

    Five million people die each year due to climate- or carbon-related causes, and total mortality by 2030 could total 100 million people, according to new report from DARA, a nonprofit organization that works to improve aid to those affected by conflict and climate change and quantify the global cost of climate change and carbon use. But the report has drawn some fire for being too alarmist.

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