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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category natural resources.
  • Simulating Transboundary Water Conflict in South Asia, and the Effect of Drought on Civil Conflict in Africa

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    Reading Radar  //  February 26, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett

    bone dry and flooding Natural resource management is a trust issue. There’s no better illustration of this than a scenario exercise. A new CNA Corporation report, Bone Dry and Flooding, details a simulation they ran for transboundary water management in the Indian sub-continent. Players of the game – nationals of China, Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh who had all previously worked in politics, policy, or development – were given a hypothetical five-year time span to manage shared water resources.

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  • Re-Thinking Climate Interventions in Fragile and Conflict-Affected States: Insights From Nepal

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 12, 2015  //  By Clémence Finaz & Janani Vivekananda
    Nepal-tree2

    While much of the debate around climate financing focuses on “how much,” an equally important question is “how?”

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  • New Markets Meet Old Grievances: The Fight Over Biofuels in Kenya’s Tana River Delta

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 9, 2015  //  By Kate Neville
    Orma-cattle

    Stepping away from herds of cattle, subsistence farms, and other responsibilities at home, roughly a hundred Kenyan villagers traveled overnight by bus from the Tana River Delta to Nairobi in February 2011 for a hearing at the national high court. The claimants declared that the lack of a “comprehensive land use master plan” infringed on the rights of the region’s people, and called for the prohibition of further land and resource development until such a plan was negotiated.

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  • Integrated Development, Focus on Empowerment Builds Resilience in Nepal

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    From the Wilson Center  //  February 5, 2015  //  By Sarah Meyerhoff
    Nepal-woman

    From the mountains and foothills of the Himalayas to the Terai plains, climate change is rapidly changing life in Nepal. Many communities however, are not strangers to environmental stress; for decades, rapid population growth alongside agriculture and fuelwood collection have degraded land and diminished forests. [Video Below]

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  • Report: Damming of Lake Turkana Could Leave Thousands Without Water, Provoke Tribal Conflict

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    Eye On  //  February 3, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett

    The damming of a river that feeds the world’s largest desert lake could lead not only to less drinking water for thousands of Kenyans, but international conflict between tribes for what little water remains.

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  • Jeffrey Gettleman, The New York Times

    Mosquito Nets Used for Fishing Raise Sustainability, Health Questions

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    January 28, 2015  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    mosquito_net

    The original version of this article, by Jeffrey Gettleman, appeared on The New York Times.

    BANGWEULU WETLANDS, Zambia – Out here on the endless swamps, a harsh truth has been passed down from generation to generation: There is no fear but the fear of hunger.

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  • Judy Oglethorpe: Fighting Environmental Change in Nepal Through Community Empowerment

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    Friday Podcasts  //  January 23, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett
    oglethorpe

    “We believe that ecosystems can help people to adapt,” says Judy Oglethorpe in this week’s podcast. “But at the same time, people have to help ecosystems to adapt in order to continue to provide environmental services.”

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  • Broken Landscape: Confronting India’s Water-Energy Choke Point

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    Choke Point  //  January 20, 2015  //  By Sean Peoples

    “We don’t know the reason for the death of fish in downstream villages,” Hamberton Nongtdu, a mine owner from the northeastern Indian state of Meghalaya, told me.

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