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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category global health.
  • Infographic: Conquering China’s Sludge Mountains

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  April 9, 2015  //  By Hongli Liu & Siqi Han
    ChasetheStink2

    While Chinese officials make full frontal regulatory attacks on smog, untreated sludge, an often toxic byproduct from sewage treatment, continues to quietly spread into groundwater and contaminate soil and food.

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  • Not Enough to Go Around? Tensions Over Land Threaten to Boil Over in Burundi

    ›
    On the Beat  //  April 7, 2015  //  By Schuyler Null
    Burundi

    “Alphonse, however, had not come to talk. Without saying a word, he raised a machete and brought it down onto his uncle’s skull.”

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  • World Water Day: A Wellspring for Sustainable Development

    ›
    March 20, 2015  //  By Schuyler Null & Linnea Bennett
    Katse-Dam1

    This year’s World Water Day is taking on a broader theme than years past: sustainable development. The theme makes sense as two major international processes – the drafting of the Sustainable Development Goals to replace the Millennium Development Goals, and the most anticipated UN Climate Summit in years – are taking place in 2015. Decisions made over the next nine months will play a huge role in relationships between nations and global development priorities going forward.

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  • SAM EATON, PRI’S THE WORLD

    In Malawi, Attitudes Toward Family Planning Shift After Flooding, Hunger

    ›
    March 18, 2015  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Malawi-Eaton

    The original version of this article, by Sam Eaton, appeared on PRI’s The World.

    For two villages in southern Malawi, climate change and contraception have become intertwined. So much so, that long-held cultural assumptions are starting to change.

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  • A Quick Video Tour of How We Got to 7 Billion and Where We’re Going Next

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    Eye On  //  March 16, 2015  //  By Schuyler Null
    sydney_harbor

    Hans Rosling has always been an innovator when it comes to bringing big ideas to big audiences. The Norwegian doctor, statistician, and co-founder of the Gapminder Foundation has become known – to the kind of people who watch TED Talks anyway – for lively presentations aimed at demystifying common ideas about global development and demography. On Gapminder.org, he literally stands chest-high in water appealing for your donation to help him “cross the river of myths.”

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  • Measuring Maternal Health in a Post-MDG World

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  March 10, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett
    measuring-MDGs

    As the international development community looks back on the Millennium Development Goals and ponders what remains to be done under the proposed Sustainable Development Goals, the maternal health field has some reflecting to do, said Dr. Ana Langer, professor and director of Harvard’s Maternal Health Task Force at the Wilson Center on December 1. [Video Below]

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  • The Future of Political Demography and Its Impact on Policy

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    March 9, 2015  //  By Schuyler Null
    revolution2

    “Political demography is a discipline whose time has come,” said Rob Odell of the National Intelligence Council at a gathering of demographers and researchers in New Orleans. “You can sense this inherent dissatisfaction” with a lot of analytical and predictive tools in international relations, he said, and “political demography provides policymakers a way to think about long-term trends.”

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  • Eduard Niesten, Conservation International

    Conservation Agreements Reduce People-Park Conflict in Liberia

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    March 6, 2015  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    CI_Liberia

    The original version of this article, by Eduard Niesten, appeared on Conservation International’s Human Nature blog.

    When I began working in Liberia right after the Accra settlement ended Liberia’s civil war in 2003, I could not help worrying about whether the peace would last. Burnt-out cars lined the streets of Monrovia, bullet holes scarred many of its buildings and the wary U.N. peacekeepers manning checkpoints behind sandbags and barbed wire reinforced the sense that violence could flare up again at any time.

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