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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category meta.
  • Top 10 Posts for March 2017

    ›
    What You Are Reading  //  April 4, 2017  //  By Schuyler Null
    March-top-10

    Wilson Center Director, President, and CEO Jane Harman and WWF President and CEO Carter Roberts put their weight behind growing momentum to ensure water stays on the radar for U.S. foreign policymakers in one of last month’s most-read stories.

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  • Top 10 Posts for February 2017

    ›
    What You Are Reading  //  March 1, 2017  //  By Schuyler Null
    Feb-top-10

    John Oldfield called it: last month’s most popular story was once again on the U.S. Global Water Strategy. The Wilson Center’s Sherri Goodman, Ruth Greenspan Bell, and Nausheen Iqbal, like Oldfield before them, urged the new administration to take seriously the development of the strategy, due later this year, and provide “stronger American leadership” on global water issues.

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  • Top 10 Posts for January 2017

    ›
    What You Are Reading  //  February 7, 2017  //  By Schuyler Null
    january-top-10

    The first U.S. Global Water Strategy is due in October, and despite a tumultuous start to the year, the U.S. government shouldn’t let this opportunity to demonstrate global leadership pass, says John Oldfield in last month’s most popular story.

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  • The Invisible World Ocean Regime, and USAID’s 2015 Water Activities in Review

    ›
    Reading Radar  //  February 1, 2017  //  By Sreya Panuganti

    USAID-Water-ReviewAccording to their recent Safeguarding the World’s Water report, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) invested $499,995,179 in water-related programming in 54 countries in 2015.

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  • Top 10 Posts for 2016

    ›
    What You Are Reading  //  December 27, 2016  //  By Schuyler Null
    2016-Top-10

    If 2015 was the year of international cooperation, 2016 seems to have been about withdrawing from external entanglements and re-focusing on national priorities, as the global displacement crisis ground on, terror attacks battered liberal governments, and fighting in the Middle East continued.

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  • Top 10 Posts for November 2016

    ›
    What You Are Reading  //  December 1, 2016  //  By Schuyler Null
    november10

    Climate change isn’t a political issue in many countries, but it is in the United States. If that trend continues much longer, American service members may find themselves at “the intersection of politics and events” as they confront the consequences of climate change head on in the form of increased instability and humanitarian disasters, says Edward J. Erickson in a special issue of the U.S. Marine Corps Press Journal.

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  • UN Agency Calls for Global Transformation of Agriculture in the Face of a Changing Climate

    ›
    November 15, 2016  //  By Sreya Panuganti
    Laos

    A recent report by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) warns that over the next 15 years, climate change will add to the number of people living in poverty via its effects on the agriculture and food sectors. By 2030, climate-related effects on food-related livelihoods could lead to an additional 35 to 122 million impoverished people, according to the 2016 State of Food and Agriculture Report.

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  • Top 10 Posts for October 2016

    ›
    What You Are Reading  //  November 4, 2016  //  By Schuyler Null
    october-top-10

    What happens when melting ice reveals buried nuclear waste from a foreign power originally there at the behest of a colonial power? Greenland may find out in the years ahead, according to research by Jeff and William Colgan about a Cold War-era U.S. military base long thought buried beneath an ice cap.

    MORE
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