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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category security.
  • Re-Thinking Climate Interventions in Fragile and Conflict-Affected States: Insights From Nepal

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 12, 2015  //  By Clémence Finaz & Janani Vivekananda
    Nepal-tree2

    While much of the debate around climate financing focuses on “how much,” an equally important question is “how?”

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  • Youth Bulge, Exclusionary Regimes, and the Islamic State’s Big Mistake

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 10, 2015  //  By Jack A. Goldstone

    Last week, the Islamic State’s ignorance of the role of demography in their local success may have led them to overplay their hand. Seeking to dissuade Jordanians from following their government in actively supporting the alliance arrayed against them, they executed a captured Jordanian pilot in horrendous fashion, burning him alive. Yet Jordan is not like Syria or Iraq, where violence against westerners or Shi’a or other minorities has helped split people from their allegiance to the government. Instead, this act of violence seems to have unified Jordan’s Sunnis against the Islamic State for their actions against a fellow Sunni Muslim. Jordan has expanded its assault, striking dozens of targets in Iraq for the first time.

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  • Report: Damming of Lake Turkana Could Leave Thousands Without Water, Provoke Tribal Conflict

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    Eye On  //  February 3, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett

    The damming of a river that feeds the world’s largest desert lake could lead not only to less drinking water for thousands of Kenyans, but international conflict between tribes for what little water remains.

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  • Can the Military Help Change the Way We Think About Energy?

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    From the Wilson Center  //  January 27, 2015  //  By Schuyler Null
    Navy_Energy

    How to stop climate change while expanding energy production is one of the biggest challenges in global development. Doing so requires all kinds of improvements in efficiency – from reducing the amount of electricity lost in transmission to better motors and lightbulbs. But, as demonstrated by recent efforts in the Pentagon, changes to how people work may be the lowest hanging fruit.

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  • The U.S. Military’s Role in Global Health; Motivating Behavioral Change Through Personal Health

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    Reading Radar  //  January 19, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett

    RR-Global-Health-Picture-CCClimate change mitigation efforts are more broadly supported when they are framed as a public health issue, according to results recently published in Climatic Change. After polling U.S. participants with political identities ranging from very liberal to very conservative, authors Nada Petrovic, Jaime Madrigano, and Lisa Zaval found most participants, except those who identified as very conservative, believed “health” to be the most compelling reason to reduce fossil fuels.

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  • Low Oil Prices Could Shake up Africa’s Petro States

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    Guest Contributor  //  January 12, 2015  //  By Jill Shankleman
    UNAMID

    One in five African states produce hydrocarbons, and most of these are heavily dependent on oil and gas revenues to finance their governments and generate foreign exchange. Further, an emerging group of East African states are waiting on international oil companies to develop new oil and gas reserves. But Africa’s record using non-renewable oil and gas resources to trigger economic and social development is poor – and plummeting prices may portend more instability to come.

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  • UN Report Highlights Women’s Roles in Natural Resource Management During and After Conflict

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    Guest Contributor  //  January 5, 2015  //  By Priya Kamdar
    DRC_womenNRM

    It’s been 14 years since the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1325 acknowledging women as important agents of change in recovery from conflict and peacebuilding generally. But between 1992 and 2011, only four percent of signatories in 31 major peace processes around the world were women, and only 12 out of 585 peace agreements referred to or made provisions for women’s needs in the reconstruction process.

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  • Crunching the Numbers on Climate Change, Conflict, and Food Aid

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    Reading Radar  //  December 31, 2014  //  By Sarah Meyerhoff

    Two studies push back on recent analyses that claim to demonstrate empirical links between food aid and conflict and climate change and conflict.

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