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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category global health.
  • Lancet Series Launch: Breastfeeding and the Fight Against Formula Marketing

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    Dot-Mom  //  On the Beat  //  February 24, 2023  //  By Sarah B. Barnes
    Young,Mother,Breastfeeding,Her,Newborn,Child,In,Hospital,After,Cesarean,

    “Too many children are dying in the first month of life,” said Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief of The Lancet at a recent launch event for the 2023 Lancet Series on Breastfeeding, hosted by The Royal Society of Medicine, London. Indeed, the global numbers are staggering. Horton observed that 2.3 million children died in the first month of life in 2021—that’s more than 6,000 newborns dying every single day.

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  • Planning, Pleasure, and Progress: How ICFP 2022 Advanced the Family Planning Dialogue

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    Dot-Mom  //  February 15, 2023  //  By Deekshita Ramanarayanan
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    The sixth International Conference on Family Planning (ICFP) held in Pattaya, Thailand in November 2022 offered an important reason for celebration: tens of millions more people are using a modern method of family planning now than were doing so when the first ICFP was held in London ten years ago. How has this happened? One key reason is that governments, corporations, non-governmental organizations, and donors globally are taking steps to advance reproductive freedom through providing voluntary family planning.

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  • Old Dangers, New Modes: Climate Change and Human Trafficking

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 6, 2023  //  By Marissa Jordan & Noah Gordon
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    For thousands of years, natural factors like rainfall and temperature helped determine the fate of economies and societies. For thousands of years, humans also engaged in human trafficking and kept one another as enslaved people. But as human prosperity increased exponentially beginning in the 19th century, it may have seemed that such concerns were relics of the past.

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  • What Will it Take to Actually Eliminate Cervical Cancer?

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    Dot-Mom  //  Guest Contributor  //  February 1, 2023  //  By Tracey Shissler & Maura McCarthy
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    We have all the tools we need for the elimination of cervical cancer, a largely preventable cancer that annually kills more than 300,000 women worldwide—the vast majority in low- and middle-income countries.

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  • Top 5 Dot-Mom Guest Contributor Posts in 2022

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    Dot-Mom  //  What You Are Reading  //  January 18, 2023  //  By Deekshita Ramanarayanan
    Guest Contributor Top 5 photo

    In 2022, the Dot-Mom column published several pieces from expert guest authors from the greater maternal and reproductive health community. In our top read guest contributor piece of the year, Susie Jolly examined the role of colonialism in sexuality education globally. Jolly highlighted examples where sexual health knowledge is built on unethical medical research carried out on racialized people, such as the study of untreated syphilis among Black men in the United States. Sexuality educators, especially those placed in the Global North, have a responsibility to work to decolonize their work. Jolly suggests supporting resources led by marginalized people, critically examining colonialism’s influence in the understanding of sexuality, and shifting the dynamics of who decides on content to lend more weight to non-Western expertise and young people learning from their own experiences.

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  • Guatemala’s Western Highlands: Addressing Gendered Vulnerability to Climate Change

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    Guest Contributor  //  January 17, 2023  //  By Jessie Pinchoff & Angel del Valle

    Indigenous women of GuatemalaÕs Polochic valley are feeding their families, growing their businesses and saving more money than ever before, with the help of a joint UN programme thatÕs empowering rural women.  Pictured: Women from Aldea Campur, in Alta Verapaz, make, market and package their own shampoo, earning extra income for themselves and for their families.  The Joint Programme on Accelerating Progress towards the Economic Empowerment of Rural Women by FAO, WFP, IFAD and UN Women is working to advance advance gender equality and economic empowerment of women in Ethiopia, Guatemala, Kyrgyzstan, Liberia, Nepal, Niger and Rwanda. In Guatemala, the programme started in 2015, with funding from Norway and Sweden, supporting rural women to develop a range of skills, from sustainable agricultural practices to marketing organic shampoo and learning solar engineering. With better knowledge of their own rights and access to skills, credit and income, women participants can make more decisions within their homes and participate in municipal spaces. Read More: http://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2018/7/feature-guatemala-saving-for-a-rainy-day Photo: UN Women/Ryan Brown

    The Population Institute’s recent report, Invisible Threads: Addressing the root causes of migration from Guatemala by investing in women and girls, has brought attention to the numerous factors that drive migration in Guatemala. One of the key factors addressed in the report is climate change, which is linked closely to issues concerning land in that country. To this day, multiple generations of indigenous women endure the effects of land displacement and inequities in access to land—as well as related social and economic pressures. In concert with other political, social, and economic problems, this particular challenge has resulted in large outflows of migrants from the region.

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  • Whisper Networks in a Wider World of Oppression

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    Guest Contributor  //  January 10, 2023  //  By Chris Langevin & Julia McCoy
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    Abortion restrictions may create obstacles for legal access, but they do nothing to eliminate the need for life-saving reproductive healthcare. And when there is a lack of licit opportunities to obtain that care, patients find pathways to get it through alternative networks.

    For instance, after the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs v. Jackson decision in June 2022 reversed a decades-long precedent protecting the constitutional right to an abortion, social media and online forums were filled with reactions and resources alike. Among these interventions were viral posts circulated offering to host anyone going on a “camping” trip in a state with legally protected reproductive rights. These “camping trip” posts alluded to a willingness to aid and abet individuals traveling for abortions in states with legally-protected access—and they captured the complications and conflicts embedded in these responses to the ruling.

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  • Global Population Growth is an Opportunity to Invest in People

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    Dot-Mom  //  December 7, 2022  //  By Alyssa Kumler
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    Just in the last minute, 169 more people were born on planet Earth, and everyday more than a quarter of a million are added to that total. John Milewski, Moderator of Wilson Center NOW, laid out these astonishing facts at the beginning of a Wilson Center NOW conversation on the implications of global population growth with Wilson Center Fellow Jennifer Sciubba on November 14— the eve of the historic day when the number of people on the planet officially surpassed 8 billion. 

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