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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category oil.
  • Backdraft #7: Janani Vivekananda on What Renewable Energy Projects Can Learn From Oil, and Future-Proofing Humanitarian Responses

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    Backdraft podcast  //  Friday Podcasts  //  April 21, 2017  //  By Lauren Herzer Risi

    Janani-smallAs more and more development and humanitarian programs contend with climate-related problems, there are important lessons learned from past experience that should not be forgotten, says Janani Vivekananda, formerly of International Alert and now with adelphi, in this week’s episode of “Backdraft.”

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  • Can Demographic-Environmental Stress Contribute to Mass Atrocities? And the Future of Arctic Cooperation

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    Reading Radar  //  March 30, 2017  //  By Sara Merken

    hendrixfinalIn a brief published by the Stanley Foundation, Cullen Hendrix explores how “the degradation and overexploitation of renewable sources…and unequal access to these resources” can make societies more or less susceptible to experiencing mass atrocities. Hendrix proposes that “demographic-environmental stress” is most likely to contribute to mass atrocities (genocide, war crimes, or crimes against humanity) in agricultural societies that have a high level of group identity-driven politics and economics, exclusionary political institutions, political actors that deprive certain groups, or when governments have low legitimacy.

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  • In Ecuador, Indigenous Environmental Attitudes Affected by Proximity to Oil Extraction

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    Guest Contributor  //  March 27, 2017  //  By Todd A. Eisenstadt & Karleen West
    Cofan-Dureno1

    True to essentialist stereotypes, Latin America’s indigenous peoples are the best stewards of the region’s rainforests. But the source of their enthusiasm for environmental protection is more complex than mere ascriptive traits or whether they speak native languages. What’s more, in a development that should be worrying to environmentalists, exposure to the negative effects of extractive industries appears to have a degrading effect on that enthusiasm.

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  • Backdraft Episode #2: Stacy VanDeveer on the New Energy Economy and the Fate of Petro States

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    Backdraft podcast  //  Friday Podcasts  //  February 10, 2017  //  By Lauren Herzer Risi

    stacy-smallA “green economy,” an energy sector composed entirely of renewables, is the goal of many. But we haven’t thought out the full implications of that change, says Stacy VanDeveer, professor at the University of Massachusetts Boston, in this week’s “Backdraft” podcast.

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  • “You Are Asking About Pollution?”: One Journalist’s Perspective on the Mid East’s Environmental Crisis

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    Guest Contributor  //  November 14, 2016  //  By Peter Schwartzstein
    Cairo-skyline

    It was some point in May last year, shortly after ISIS surged into the city of Ramadi, and I was working on a story about Iraq’s fast-disappearing Mesopotamian Marshes. Keen to fact-check a few statistics with the Ministry of Water Resources and to hear the government line on the wetlands’ struggles, I dialed its Baghdad offices. After being passed from official to official like a hot potato, a young employee, Hussein, finally gave it to me straight. “No, no, we don’t have this sort of information,” he said, clearly impatient to get off the phone. “There are much more important things in Iraq right now.”

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  • Chris Mooney, The Washington Post

    Mosul Battle Shows Link Between War and Environmental Degradation, Says UN Agency

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    November 4, 2016  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Mosul2003

    The original version of this article, by Chris Mooney, appeared on The Washington Post.

    The United Nations Environment Program is highlighting the battle by Iraqi forces to reclaim Mosul from the Islamic State as the latest instance in the complex but very real linkage between military conflicts around the world and extreme environmental degradation.

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  • UN Special Rapporteur Calls for Action on Toxic Remnants of War to Protect Children

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    Guest Contributor  //  September 23, 2016  //  By Wim Zwijnenburg
    Syria

    This month, Baskut Tuncak, the United Nations special rapporteur on human rights and toxics, presented the findings of his report on the effects of hazardous substances on the lives of children around the world to the 33rd session of the Human Rights Council. His conclusions were bold and brave for their implications on conflict: States should take responsibility for cleaning up the toxic remnants of war and providing medical aid to affected communities and individuals.

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  • From Brown to Green: Three Scenarios for a Southeast Asian Regional Energy Grid

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    Guest Contributor  //  September 7, 2016  //  By Molly McKeon & Adam Greer
    Lopburi-solar

    Southeast Asia is one of the fastest growing energy markets in the world. Regional demand for energy may grow by as much as 80 percent and electricity demand more than triple by 2040. To keep up, governments are working to expand coordination across borders and create a broader regional energy grid (indeed their efforts predate their northern neighbors’ recent announcement of a “supergrid” by several decades).

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