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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Africa.
  • New Approaches to Projecting Population Yield Divergent Forecasts and Valuable Insights

    ›
    Reading Radar  //  October 1, 2014  //  By Sarah Meyerhoff

    As the UN General Assembly begins charting a course toward sustainable growth, population projections will likely undergird many of their most important assumptions about the future. As two new papers released last week demonstrate, however, there are differing opinions about how much the world’s population will grow and when it will stabilize.

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  • Paola Adriázola and Stephan Wolters, ECC Platform

    Investing in Collaboration to Manage Natural Resource Conflict

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    September 25, 2014  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    lake_victoria

    The original version of this article, by Paola Adriázola and Stephan Wolters, appeared on the Environment, Conflict, and Cooperation (ECC) Platform.

    Conflict over environmental resources endangers rural people’s livelihoods and can increase the risk of broader social conflict. Yet joint action to sustain shared resources can also be a powerful means for community building. The Strengthening Aquatic Resource Governance (STARGO) project demonstrated this in three ecoregions: Lake Victoria, with a focus on Uganda; Lake Kariba, with a focus on Zambia; and Tonle Sap Lake in Cambodia. The results of the project were released at an event in Berlin in early July 2014.

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  • Andrew Revkin, Dot Earth

    On the Path Past 9 Billion, Little Crosstalk Between UN Sessions on Population and Global Warming

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    September 22, 2014  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    china_construction

    The original version of this article, by Andrew Revkin, appeared on The New York Times’ Dot Earth blog.

    The United Nations and the streets of Manhattan are going into global warming saturation mode, from Sunday’s People’s Climate March through the Tuesday climate change summit convened by Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and on through an annual green-energy event called Climate Week.

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  • Hydro-Diplomacy Can Build Peace Over Shared Waters, But Needs More Support

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    Guest Contributor  //  September 22, 2014  //  By Benjamin Pohl & Susanne Schmeier
    outflow

    From Ukraine and the Middle East to sub-Saharan Africa and East Asia, the world is engulfed in a series of significant international crises. But despite such urgent issues, it would be a grave mistake to forget about the structural foreign policy challenges – such as access to water – that could become the crises of the future.

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  • Global Youth Wellbeing Index Launched

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    Eye On  //  September 15, 2014  //  By Heather Randall

    An estimated 1.8 billion people today are between the ages of 10 and 24 and 85 percent of them live in developing economies and/or fragile states. Such youthful age structures can lead to a number of challenges, including increased potential for instability, and countries with large numbers of young people must find ways to address their unique needs.

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  • Beyond Scarcity: Coleen Vogel on Reframing Water Security

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    Friday Podcasts  //  September 12, 2014  //  By Moses Jackson
    vogel_small

    What exactly is meant by “water security?” Different conceptualizations of the problem can lead to different, possibly misguided, solutions, says Coleen Vogel in this week’s podcast. Vogel, professor at the University of Pretoria and a lead author of the IPCC’s 4th and 5th assessment reports, calls for reframing the water security discourse in three key ways.

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  • Effective Conservation Efforts Must Recognize Livelihoods, Participatory Decision-Making, Research Finds

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    Reading Radar  //  September 11, 2014  //  By Heather Randall

    IIEDReportCover_RRA new report from the International Institute for Environment and Development seeks to understand why Uganda’s Bwindi Impenetrable National Park continues to be exploited despite park officials’ implementation of “integrated conservation and development” (ICD) efforts. The study finds that local people’s perceptions of the benefits of the integrated conservation and development vary depending on five primary factors: age, level of education, homestead distance to the national park, quality of life, and wealth.

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  • Proven and Promising Solutions to Strengthening Maternal Health Supply Chains

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    Dot-Mom  //  Reading Radar  //  August 28, 2014  //  By Katrina Braxton

    supplychain-frontIn 2012, as part of the Every Women Every Child movement, 13 vital health commodities were identified by a UN panel that could save the lives of more than 6 million women and children over the course of five years. There are often significant cultural and behavioral barriers to these commodities reaching people in low- and middle-income countries, but physical logistics is also a major problem.

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