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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Eye On.
  • 2012 Aid Transparency Index

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    Eye On  //  October 15, 2012  //  By Payal Chandiramani

    Publish What You Fund recently released its 2012 Aid Transparency Index, an annual review of 43 indicators assessing to what degree information about policies, strategies, and individual projects are published for public consumption by aid donors. These indicators include things like disclosing the type of aid given (e.g., grant, loan, export credit, debt relief), the quality of disclosure policies, and the online presence of centralized, public databases of all the organization’s activities.

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  • Beer: The Perfect Illustration of the Water-Energy-Food Nexus?

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    Eye On  //  October 5, 2012  //  By Kate Diamond

    The water-energy-food nexus seems to be garnering more and more attention in the media and elsewhere, and it’s easy to see why: it’s a relatively simple way to illustrate how interconnected the world is today and the kind of domino-like effects that scarcity can have.

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  • Michael Klare on the Race for What’s Left

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    Eye On  //  September 27, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    Around the world, as the most easily accessible natural resources are depleted, states are beginning to turn to more remote reserves to meet their needs and the shift may spark international tensions or even conflict, said Hampshire College professor Michael Klare in a recent interview with ECSP. “I worry very much about this growing global competition for the remaining resources in those parts of the world,” he said.

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  • Tracking This Year’s Extreme Weather

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    Eye On  //  September 25, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    “Over the past several months, extreme weather and climate events seemed to have become the norm rather than the exception,” writes Kelly Levin for the World Resources Institute (WRI). Indeed, records have been broken around the world as countries experience unprecedented heat, drought, flooding, or other types of severe weather. And people are starting to take notice. A number of recent stories try to make sense of this wild weather and what, if anything, it has to do with climate change.

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  • Al Jazeera Maps Water Flashpoints Around the World

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    Eye On  //  September 19, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    Historically, the concept of “water wars” – inter-state wars fought solely over water – has been fairly unsubstantiated. But continued population growth, accelerating development, and environmental changes are making water more scarce and in turn increasing the chances of related tensions and violence. To illustrate the growing role water plays in tensions around the world, Al Jazeera has put together a map linked to a series of stories they’ve done on water “flashpoints.”

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  • Counting the World: UNFPA Highlights the Challenges of Census-Taking

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    Eye On  //  September 13, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    The United Nations biannual population projections are some of the most (if not the most) widely used numbers in demography. Researchers and policymakers alike rely on the figures to plan for present and future challenges. But few consider the story behind the statistics. Where does the data come from? The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) recently released a short documentary on conducting censuses in challenging environments, with a spotlight on Indonesia, Chad, the Palestinian Territories, Belarus, and Bolivia.

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  • Stress Levels of Major Global Aquifers Revealed by Groundwater Footprint Study

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    Eye On  //  August 21, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    In the “first spatially explicit comparison of groundwater use, availability, and environmental flow for aquifers globally,” a new article in Nature finds that the “size of the global groundwater footprint is currently about 3.5 times the actual area of aquifers.” An aquifer’s footprint is the theoretical size it would need to be to sustainably support use at its current rate, so groundwater footprints being much larger than their corresponding aquifers is a sign of overuse.

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  • Hans Rosling on Religion, Babies, and Poverty

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    Eye On  //  August 17, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    “I’m going to talk about religion. But it’s a broad and very delicate subject, so I have to limit myself. Therefore I will limit myself to only talk about the links between religion and sexuality…I will talk on what I remember as the most wonderful – it’s the moment when the young couple whispers, ‘tonight, we are going to make a baby,’” said Hans Rosling, the eclectic Swedish doctor and statistician known for his Gapminder tool, in a TedxSummit presentation in April.

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