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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category video.
  • After Mexico City and Before Copenhagen: Keeping Our Promise to Mothers and Newborns

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  May 3, 2016  //  By Haodan "Heather" Chen
    mother and child

    Last October, on the heels of the UN General Assembly agreeing to the Sustainable Development Goals, the global health community met in Mexico City to discuss strategy for achieving the “grand convergence”: finally bridging the gap between maternal and newborn health in rich and poor countries. [Video Below]

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  • How Zika Is Shaping the Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights Agenda

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  April 27, 2016  //  By Francesca Cameron
    zika handout

    “The Zika outbreak is a result of something; it is the result of the lost attention to sexual and reproductive health issues as a human right and women as subjects of rights,” said Jaime Nadal Roig, the United Nations Population Fund representative to Brazil, at the Wilson Center on April 12. [Video Below]

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  • Pathways to Resilience: Evidence on Links Between Conflict Management, Natural Resources, and Food Security

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  April 26, 2016  //  By Gracie Cook
    food for peace

    In 2015, the NGO Mercy Corps released some surprising findings from conflict management programs in the Horn of Africa. Interventions from 2013 to 2015 focused on building community-level cooperation, strengthening institutions, and enhancing resilience. The results indicate that natural resource management can be a key governance pillar to build around and that such cooperation can strengthen household resilience to climate and food security shocks. [Video Below]

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  • From Climate Challenge to Climate Hope: Embracing New Opportunities This Earth Day

    ›
    April 22, 2016  //  By Roger-Mark De Souza
    Haiti factory1

    This Earth Day, the United States, China, and Canada are among more than 170 countries expected to take part in the largest one-day signing of an international agreement in history. The ratification of the climate agreement hammered out at the Paris Conference of Parties (COP-21) last December could be the most significant elevation of environmental issues on the global stage yet.

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  • Can Citizen Science Help Small Communities Combat Big Fishing Fleets?

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  From the Wilson Center  //  April 20, 2016  //  By Meaghan Parker

    This Earth Day weekend, the U.S. Department of State is hosting more than 2,000 coders in more than 40 cities to encourage creative thinking about technological solutions to ocean issues. The third annual Fishackathon could produce new tools for local communities to track long-distance fishing, a growing problem in some places, as China, in particular, scales up its efforts.

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  • A More Extreme Sea-Level Rise Scenario, and the Global Environmental Burden of Disease

    ›
    Reading Radar  //  April 13, 2016  //  By Haodan "Heather" Chen

    RR3_1Though governments have agreed to try to limit global warming to no more than two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, a paper by James Hansen et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics finds that goal may not prevent major changes on an irreversible and unadaptable scale. Studying the last interglacial period, about 120,000 years ago, when the temperature was less than one degree Celsius warmer than today, Hansen et al. estimate sea level was six to nine meters higher than today.

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  • What Next? Climate Adaptation After Paris

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    From the Wilson Center  //  April 8, 2016  //  By Kathleen Mogelgaard
    dhaka

    In December 2015, representatives from 195 nations gathered in Paris for the 21st Conference of the Parties (COP-21) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. After two weeks of intensive negotiations, countries approved an agreement that charts new territory for global cooperation to address climate change. [Video Below]

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  • What Happens When You Can’t Build Back? Addressing Climate Change Loss and Damage

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    From the Wilson Center  //  April 7, 2016  //  By Haodan "Heather" Chen
    Sandy damage

    The world is entering a new phase of climate change defined by “failure to mitigate sufficiently and failure to adapt sufficiently,” said Saleemul Huq, director of the Bangladesh-based International Center for Climate Change and Development, at the Wilson Center on March 16. [Video Below]

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