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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category population.
  • Meeting Africa’s Demographic Challenge

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    Guest Contributor  //  November 14, 2022  //  By Phillip Carter III & Stephen Schwartz
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    Often cast into the backwaters of U.S. foreign policy, sub-Saharan Africa now looms large as the Biden Administration grapples with a wide range of global challenges. President Biden will soon host the upcoming Africa Leaders’ Summit in Washington, that acknowledges the U.S. government must do much more in Africa in order to advance U.S. interests and global prosperity.

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  • Investing in Women and Girls is Central to Addressing Root Causes of Migration from Guatemala

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    Guest Contributor  //  November 1, 2022  //  By Kathleen Mogelgaard
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    In recent years, a growing proportion of migrants at the US southern border have come from Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras. This surge of migrants from Central America has prompted the U.S. government to seek to better understand and address the root causes of migration from the region. One substantive response came in July 2021, under Executive Order 14010, when the Biden-Harris Administration released what has become known as the Root Causes Strategy. The White House pledged to commit $4 billion over four years on efforts to address drivers of irregular migration from these three countries.

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  • Environmentalists Need To Talk About Population Growth. Here’s How.

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    Guest Contributor  //  October 3, 2022  //  By Sarah Baillie

    Ida Royani, Jamilah Volunteer provide counseling to Risni Apriani a pregnant mother about what to do during pregnancy in Bojongmanik Sub-District, Lebak, Banten Indonesia. (Oscar Siagian/ USAID-JALIN)

    On November 15, the world population is projected to reach 8 billion people. As we approach that milestone, there’s no denying that our rapidly growing human population also places extraordinary pressure on the environment. The human population has doubled in the last 50 years, while wildlife populations have been cut in half.

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  • How Gender Inequality Drives the Global Crisis of Unintended Pregnancy

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  July 27, 2022  //  By Alyssa Kumler
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    “Half. This is the proportion of all pregnancies that are unintended. That is 121 million pregnancies every year,” said Sarah Craven, Director of the Washington D.C. Office at UNFPA during a recent U.S. launch event for the 2022 UNFPA State of World Population (SWOP) report. “For these women, the most life altering reproductive choice, whether to become pregnant or not, is no choice at all. This is an unseen crisis unfolding right before our eyes.”

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  • World Population Day Shines a Spotlight on Inequities

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    Guest Contributor  //  July 11, 2022  //  By Kathleen Mogelgaard

    July 11 is World Population Day—a day designated annually by the United Nations that should prompt us, in the words of the International Institute for Sustainable Development, to “focus attention on the urgency and importance of population issues.”

    Examining population trends helps describe where we’ve been and suggests where we’re headed. Yet these facts about human existence on our planet also offer insights into how we got here—including a window into places where inequities exist and rights have been denied.

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  • Top 5 Posts for April 2022

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    What You Are Reading  //  May 20, 2022  //  By Claire Doyle

    7005597459_e47d4ca492_cAs the world reels from the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the pandemic, climate shocks, and other crises, strategic future planning is more important than ever. In April’s most-read article, Steven Gale points to a source of hope in the suite of inclusive, “future-forward” initiatives that are unfolding under UN leadership, from risk reporting to impact assessments and youth engagement. These activities, encompassed by the UN’s Our Common Agenda, represent a global collaborative effort to map future risks and identify policy options in service of long-term well-being for people and the planet.

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  • New Security Brief | Converging Risks: Demographic Trends, Gender Inequity, and Security Challenges in the Sahel

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    Africa in Transition  //  April 4, 2022  //  By Wilson Center Staff
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    Security conditions in the Sahel are rapidly deteriorating. Since 2016, the region has witnessed a 16-fold increase in terrorist attacks. In Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, and Niger, 10.5 million people are facing starvation, and with climate-related disasters increasing and intensifying in the region, food insecurity is projected to rise. Against this backdrop, rapid population growth is outpacing governments’ ability to provide access to basic services. These pressures have transformed the central Sahel into the epicenter of a forced displacement crisis, with dire long-term and global humanitarian consequences that reverberate well beyond the region’s borders.

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  • Navigating Obstacles and Opportunities for Trans Parents

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    Dot-Mom  //  March 30, 2022  //  By Shariq Farooqi
    Amsterdam,Trans,Pride,Flag,During,Walk

    The journey to parenthood for transgender people is particularly fraught with obstacles. In the United States, 19 percent of transgender adults are parents. While there has been an increase in the prevalence of transgender parents, they are often faced with unique, complex, and often unnecessary barriers. Part of the problem lies in a lack of understanding of the differences between sex and gender as well as the distinct healthcare needs of transgender people.

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