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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category poverty.
  • Clean Cookstoves Provide Health, Environmental, and Socioeconomic Benefits, So Why Aren’t They Being Adopted?

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  December 29, 2014  //  By Tim Molnar
    Rukia2

    To stop and perhaps one day reverse climate change requires changes big and small. Despite the thousands of power plants burning coal and other fossil fuels today, nearly 3 billion people still depend on solid fuels, such as wood, dung, and crop residues, for their daily energy needs.

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  • John Welch: Ebola Creating Slow-Burning Bomb for Maternal Health in Liberia

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  December 19, 2014  //  By Sarah Meyerhoff
    welch_small

    “Our responsibility is to call attention to the fact that there’s an invisible crisis happening,” says John Welch of Partners in Health in this week’s podcast. “Ebola is a huge issue for women’s health.”

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  • What Climate Conflict Looks Like: Recent Findings and Possible Responses

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  December 16, 2014  //  By Jeffrey Stark
    Carrying-Firewood-Tillabery

    Climate change and conflict – what’s the relationship? In a recently completed set of field-based studies for USAID, the Foundation for Environmental Security and Sustainability set aside “yes-or-no” questions about whether climate change causes conflict and replaced them with pragmatic and politically informed questions about how climate change is consequential for conflict in specific fragile states.

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  • ‘Extreme Realities’ Sheds Light on Links Between Global Climate Dynamics and National Security

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  December 12, 2014  //  By Sarah Meyerhoff

    “We cannot ignore the new reality that climate change has become a major foreign policy issue in the 21st century,” a new film by Hal and Marilyn Weiner concludes.

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  • Pakistan’s Most Recent Demographic and Health Survey Reveals Slow Progress

    ›
    December 10, 2014  //  By Richard Cincotta
    Lahore-old-city

    A quick scan through the charts and graphs of Pakistan’s most recent Demographic and Health Survey yields more than a few insights into the performance of the government’s health policies and the public health and demographic challenges it will face in the future.

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  • Safety and Security in the Global Youth Wellbeing Index

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  December 9, 2014  //  By Nicole Goldin

    Few would argue with the notion that socioeconomic development is contingent on peace, safety, and security. What goes for nations, goes for people too – especially young people.

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  • Necessary Partners: The Sahel Shows Why Development and Resilience Efforts Can’t Forget Men

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  November 19, 2014  //  By Allison Shean
    Niger-Sean-Sheridan111

    One-third of boys in the developing world don’t face the risk of marriage and pregnancy before age 18. There are no laws preventing men from owning land or property. Men don’t bear the brunt of increasingly frequent and severe disasters. And men don’t hold fewer than 25 percent of parliamentary seats worldwide.

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  • Integrated Development Programs Work to Expand Conservation and Health Efforts in Uganda and Madagascar

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  November 13, 2014  //  By Heather Randall
    Bwindi1

    As is becoming clear, climate change, environmental degradation, population, and poverty alleviation are inextricably linked in many parts of the world. [Video Below]

    MORE
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