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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Africa.
  • Can Citizen Science Help Small Communities Combat Big Fishing Fleets?

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    China Environment Forum  //  From the Wilson Center  //  April 20, 2016  //  By Meaghan Parker

    This Earth Day weekend, the U.S. Department of State is hosting more than 2,000 coders in more than 40 cities to encourage creative thinking about technological solutions to ocean issues. The third annual Fishackathon could produce new tools for local communities to track long-distance fishing, a growing problem in some places, as China, in particular, scales up its efforts.

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  • Changing the Narrative on Fertility Decline in Africa

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    From the Wilson Center  //  April 20, 2016  //  By Eunice Mueni
    H4plus_SierraLeone

    Today, Africa has the world’s highest fertility rates. On average, women in sub-Saharan Africa have about five children over their reproductive lifetime, compared to a global average of 2.5 children. Research shows that the “demographic transition,” the name for the change from high death and fertility rates to lower death and eventually lower fertility rates, has proceeded differently here from other regions in the developing world.

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  • Joan Whelan on a New Strategy at the Office of Food for Peace: Address Conflict

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    Friday Podcasts  //  April 15, 2016  //  By Sean Peoples

    whelan-smallSince its inception more than 60 years ago, USAID’s Office of Food for Peace has provided critical food assistance to billions of people around the world. Yet, despite its name, the office lacked a strategy to address the effects of conflict on its work.

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  • A More Extreme Sea-Level Rise Scenario, and the Global Environmental Burden of Disease

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    Reading Radar  //  April 13, 2016  //  By Haodan "Heather" Chen

    RR3_1Though governments have agreed to try to limit global warming to no more than two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, a paper by James Hansen et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics finds that goal may not prevent major changes on an irreversible and unadaptable scale. Studying the last interglacial period, about 120,000 years ago, when the temperature was less than one degree Celsius warmer than today, Hansen et al. estimate sea level was six to nine meters higher than today.

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  • In Tanzania, Empowering Communities to Address Population, Health, and Environment Issues Together

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    Guest Contributor  //  March 28, 2016  //  By Mustafa G. Kudrati
    Kigoma

    Africa has its share of challenges, but it also leads the way in creative development responses. Take the Lake Tanganyika area in Tanzania. Daily life is hard. There are few roads. Cellphone service is patchy. You must travel by boat for seven hours to reach the nearest hospital. And if you have an obstetric emergency, there is no doctor in the village to help you.

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  • Keith Johnson, Foreign Policy

    Pentagon Directive Quietly Makes Climate Change Long-Term Priority

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    March 24, 2016  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Khan-Neshin

    The original version of this article, by Keith Johnson, appeared on Foreign Policy.

    In the middle of January, Deputy Secretary of Defense Robert Work signed off on one of the potentially most significant, if little-noticed, orders in recent Pentagon history. The directive told every corner of the Pentagon, including the office of the secretary of defense, the joint chiefs of staff, and all the combatant commands around the world, to put climate change front and center in their strategic planning.

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  • Leslie Rose, Global Waters

    Incubating Innovation: Solutions for a Parched Earth

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    March 24, 2016  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Uganda-water

    The original version of this article, by Leslie Rose, appeared in USAID’s Global Waters magazine.

    Massive droughts and water demands from a world population projected to grow to 9 billion by 2050, translate to food insecurity and lack of water for agriculture. Securing Water for Food sources and invests in a portfolio of innovative solutions that help farmers use water more efficiently and effectively; improve water storage for lean times; and remove salt from water to make more food.

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  • Creating a Water Ready World

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    March 22, 2016  //  By Sherri Goodman
    Haiti-flood

    Sitting at my desk looking at bills to be paid, the first one on the stack is for the water company, emblazoned with the phrase, “Water is Life.” Yes, we all know that. But really, as my teenagers would say, “Duh, Mom. So what?”

    Well, here’s the “so what” on this World Water Day 2016.

    MORE
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