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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category water.
  • Minegolia: China and Mongolia’s Mining Boom

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  Choke Point  //  July 16, 2013  //  By Clement Huaweilang Dai & David Tyler Gibson

    China’s economic boom appears to be contagious. Over the past few years, China’s northern neighbor has quietly caught the bug and become the world’s second-fastest growing economy, experiencing a GDP growth rate of approximately 17.3 percent in 2011. 

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  • Harry Verhoeven, ChinaDialogue

    China Shifting Balance of Power in Nile River Basin

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    China Environment Forum  //  July 12, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Tekeze Dam, Ethiopia

    The original version of this article, by Harry Verhoeven, appeared on ChinaDialogue.

    The growing intensification of economic, political and social ties between China and Africa in the last 15 years is often told as a story of copper, petrodollars, emerging Chinatowns, and bilateral visits by heads of state.

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  • Environmental Security: A Guide to the Issues (Book Preview)

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  July 1, 2013  //  By Elizabeth L. Chalecki
    Soviet nuclear bunker

    I remember the first moment when my interest in national security came crashing into ecological reality. I was on a U.S. government trip to Central Asia to inspect uranium mines in the newly-independent states of the former Soviet Union. The Cold War security imperative to achieve nuclear superiority had done a number on the environment there: Uranium was leached from the ground with sulfuric acid, transformed into a uranium oxide powder called yellowcake, and shipped off to be enriched for nuclear reactor fuel or weapons. The generals in Moscow who issued these orders did not see the collateral damage that their idea of security wreaked on the environment in Central Asia. In their attempt to out-weaponize the United States, they laid waste to the groundwater, agriculture, and public health of their own citizens.

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  • Dale Lewis on Combating Poaching in Zambia’s Luangwa Valley Through Integrated Development

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    June 28, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass

    “We did something very special for the community and the resources these farmers live with. We sat down with local leaders and promised to stop spending so much time caring about the elephants, and instead create a company that will try to address community needs,” said Dale Lewis in an interview at the Wilson Center. “The deal was they had to put down their snares and guns.”

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  • ‘At the Desert’s Edge’ Gives a Glimpse of China’s Massive Desertification Challenge

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    China Environment Forum  //  Eye On  //  June 17, 2013  //  By Luan "Jonathan" Dong

    In may not be surprising that China, home to so many other superlatives, also faces desertification on a grand scale. According to China’s State Forestry Administration, over 27 percent of the country now suffers from desertification – more than 1,000,000 square miles, or about one-third of the continental United States – impacting the lives of more than 400 million people.

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  • The Leopard in the Well: Wilson Center and Circle of Blue Launch ‘Choke Point: India’

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    Choke Point  //  June 13, 2013  //  By Keith Schneider
    Irrigation pump in Punjab

    The original version of this article, by Keith Schneider, appeared on Circle of Blue. Choke Point: India is a research and reporting initiative produced in partnership between Circle of Blue and the Wilson Center’s China Environment Forum and Asia Program.

    Perhaps because India is so big, so bewildering and chaotic, and so determined to update its elusive rural identity with sleek urban flare, Indians and the national press are fascinated by how the nation’s wild animals are faring amid the dizzying change. In many cases, not well.

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  • Michael Kugelman, The Diplomat

    Can Pakistan Avert Demographic Doom?

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    June 7, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article, by Michael Kugelman, appeared on The Diplomat.

    On May 11, Pakistan’s Election Day, approximately 60 percent of eligible voters went to the polls. This figure far exceeded the 44 percent who turned out for Pakistan’s previous election in 2008. Media reports have featured moving accounts of the elderly being carried to the polls, and of women standing in the heat for hours to cast their ballots.

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  • Eugenie Maiga, Africa Up Close

    Can Indigenous Soil and Water Conservation Techniques Help Solve Africa’s Food Crisis?

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    June 5, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article, by Eugenie Maiga, appeared on the Wilson Center’s Africa Up Close blog.

    With the 2011 and 2012 food crises in the Horn of Africa and the Sahel, calls for urgent action and sustainable solutions to food insecurity in Africa have intensified. While many factors, like rising commodity prices, have been contributing factors, land degradation stands out as a main catalyst. In the search for a solution, indigenous farming techniques may offer some quick wins.

    MORE
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