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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category security.
  • New Security Broadcast | Sarah Ladislaw on US Climate Security and “Mutually Assured Resilience”

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    New Security Broadcast  //  March 5, 2024  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    220428-A-BI463-0003In today’s episode of New Security Broadcast, ECSP Program Director Lauren Risi speaks with Sarah Ladislaw, Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Climate and Energy at the National Security Council (NSC). In the conversation, Special Assistant Ladislaw describes her role at the NSC and the most pressing climate security challenges facing the US. She also reflects on her recent address at the Munich Security Conference, and her vision for achieving “mutually assured resilience.”

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  • Clearing War Debris Can Help Ukraine Move Forward

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    Guest Contributor  //  March 4, 2024  //  By J.A. Atchue III, Karl Dix & Billy Tress

    When Russia launched its brutal invasion of Ukraine on February 22, 2024, Western nations supported Ukraine with military and financial aid. But over two years, the cost of the war has been devastating—not only in terms of lives lost, and injuries sustained, but also in the number of buildings destroyed. According to some estimates, more than 150K structures have been damaged in the conflict.

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  • Relief, Recovery, and Peace: A Follow-up Interview with DAS Iris Ferguson

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    New Security Broadcast  //  February 16, 2024  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    220428-A-BI463-0003In today’s episode of New Security Broadcast, ECSP Program Director Lauren Risi follows up with Iris Ferguson, the US Department of Defense’s (DoD) Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Arctic and Global Resilience, on their previous conversation previewing the DoD delegation to COP28.

    Deputy Assistant Secretary Ferguson discusses her takeaways from COP28 and the importance of listening to stakeholders outside the Pentagon. She also outlines some of DoD’s key energy and climate security priorities in 2024.

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch: February 12 – 16

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    Eye On  //  February 16, 2024  //  By Eleanor Greenbaum

    A window into what we are reading at the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change and Security Program

    Food, Climate, and Conflict Nexus a Priority at the UN Security Council (Food and Agriculture Organization)

    The United Nations Security Council’s High-Level Open Debate takes place in Guyana this week, and the signature event of that nation’s presidency is “The Impact of Climate Change and Food Insecurity on the Maintenance of International Peace and Security.” Several briefers have emphasized the interconnectedness between climate change and conflict, including Secretary-General António Guterres and UNFCCC Chair Simon Stiell.

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  • The Complicated Relationship Between Climate, Conflict, and Gender in Mozambique

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 12, 2024  //  By Gracsious Maviza, Mandlenkosi Maphosa, Giulia Caroli, Thea Synnestvedt & Joram Tarusarira

    Individuals face immense challenges in displacement contexts, particularly where climate, conflict, and displacement intersect. In Mozambique, climate impacts have combined with conflict to displace nearly a million people. Entire livelihoods, identities, and stability are vanishing. Women, men, girls, and boys are not just losing homes; they are losing their place in traditional societal roles, too. This chaos—and responses by the international community—are reshaping Mozambique’s gender dynamics.

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  • Weakened Infrastructure and Climate Change: The Threat to Water Security in Nineveh

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 6, 2024  //  By Nabaz Mohammed & Dylan O’Driscoll

    Iraq is incredibly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Temperatures are increasing, rainfall is decreasing, and the country experiences prolonged periods of drought. These conditions, as well as the destruction of wells and irrigation systems in the Islamic State’s (IS) targeted 2014-2017 campaign to destroy agricultural livelihoods, have created a growing water problem in Iraq’s Nineveh Plains. Indeed, water levels there have dropped low enough to subject crops to drought stress, endangering drinking water systems and affecting the ability to grow crops and raise livestock.

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch | January 29 – February 2

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    Eye On  //  February 2, 2024  //  By Eleanor Greenbaum

    A window into what we are reading at the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change and Security Program

    Climate Change Worsens Human Trafficking of Impoverished Sierra Leoneans (Al Jazeera)

    Poverty leaves many vulnerable to human trafficking in Sierra Leone. Youth unemployment is almost 60% there, and most of the population lives on less than $3 per day. Victims are offered employment, largely in the service industry. Yet when they arrive in their country of employment, their passports may be seized and they are forced into unpaid labor, often coupled with sexual abuse especially for young women.

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  • Water, Corruption, and Security in Iran

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    On the Beat  //  January 23, 2024  //  By Eleanor Greenbaum

    This past summer was the hottest on record, bringing devastating impacts to many global communities. Iran was one of many nations that faced both debilitating heat and the subsequent water stress.

    While Iran’s problems received significant media attention this year, water scarcity in the country is not a new problem. For decades, corruption and poor planning have plagued Iranian water policy, with impacts falling upon its increasingly disadvantaged provinces and, ultimately, on its ethnic minorities. Poor water policy also has contributed to an increasing number of cross-border disputes.

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