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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Africa.
  • Susan Moran, Ensia

    Beans May Be Key to Feeding the Future

    ›
    September 11, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article, by Susan Moran, appeared on Ensia.

    Lean and towering at 6 feet 5 inches, Ken Giller blends right into the rows of climbing beanstalks he is examining on this blisteringly hot spring day in Buhoro, a village in northern Rwanda. Local farmers who have been growing various varieties of beans bred for high yields and other desirable traits proudly show him their plots on the terraced hillside.

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  • For Fast-Growing Countries, Should Aging Be a Concern? Planning for the Second Demographic Dividend

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    September 10, 2013  //  By Elizabeth Leahy Madsen
    figure1-population-65

    Population aging and decline are frequently described as a threat to countries’ economic development and social stability. Evocative language, such as “demographic winter” and “graying of the great powers,” portrays the serious consequences that many observers envision as fertility and growth rates decline and the elderly comprise a greater percentage of the population. These concerns reach around the globe, including in Africa, which has the lowest percentage of elderly among the world’s major regions.

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  • Prospects for Gender Parity in UN Peacekeeping Forces, Evaluating Girls’ Empowerment Efforts

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  Reading Radar  //  August 29, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass
    Population Council Report Cover

    The Population Council’s annual report highlights new work from one of the largest organizations doing research on the lives of adolescent girls in the developing world. Of particular note is the Council’s Adolescent Girls Empowerment Program, a four-year study launched in May which will involve 42,000 girls in seven countries – Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Guatemala, India, Tanzania, and Zambia. The aim is to evaluate successful strategies for helping girls avoid child marriage, sexually transmitted infections, and unintended pregnancies at a critical juncture in their lives. Council President Peter Donaldson writes that young girls are “one of the potentially most influential figures in the developing world.” A typical 12-year-old girl “in the next few years…will either abandon or continue her schooling, be pushed into marriage and childbearing, or develop a sense of proud ownership of her physical self… As her future is reconfigured, so is ours.”

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  • A Season for Motherhood: The Role of Family Planning in Improving Maternal Health

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  August 28, 2013  //  By Swara Salih

    Ensuring access to family planning is not only a matter of human rights, but can also play a key role in protecting the health of mothers and children. Maternal health experts and program directors met at the Wilson Center on July 31 to discuss the role family planning takes in women’s health in developing countries, what successes family planning programs worldwide have had so far, and what can be done to expand services. Sarah Craven, chief of the UN Population Fund’s Washington office, moderated the event.

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  • Coastal Resource Management, Family Planning Integration Build Resilience in Madagascar and The Gambia

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  August 26, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass
    Oyster Harvesters in The Gambia

    Growing awareness of the connected challenges of natural resource management, economic growth, and human health has encouraged more integrated models of international development. The experience of two organizations – TRY Oyster Women’s Association, based in The Gambia, and Blue Ventures, based in Madagascar – demonstrates the success of a community-based approach to building resilience, enabling communities to bounce back from adversity and establish a long-term basis for development. [Video Below]

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  • Codi Yeager-Kozacek, Circle of Blue

    Water a Key Issue As Developing Countries Drive Growth in Global Food Production

    ›
    August 22, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Philippines Farming

    The original version of this article, by Codi Yeager-Kozacek, appeared on Circle of Blue.

    Developing countries will account for much of the world’s growth in agricultural production, demand, and trade during the next decade, as production growth in developed countries slows, according to reports from leading food policy organizations. The shift will pose challenges for the quality and abundance of water supplies in regions like South America, Asia, and Africa.

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  • Harnessing the Demographic Dividend: PRB’s ENGAGE Presentations Look to Empower, Educate

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    Guest Contributor  //  August 12, 2013  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    The demographic dividend – the idea that a decline from high to low rates of population growth can lead to dramatic economic gains – has become something of a buzzword in development circles. Sub-Saharan Africa holds the single largest block of remaining high fertility countries and while headlines tend towards the dramatic about demographic shifts there, less column space has been devoted to examining the underlying issues causing these shifts or the other changes that will be necessary for countries to benefit from them.

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  • Why Has the Demographic Transition Stalled in Sub-Saharan Africa?

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    August 7, 2013  //  By Elizabeth Leahy Madsen
    Ibadan Streets

    In a recent post on the new United Nations population projections, I discussed the risk in assuming that countries in sub-Saharan Africa will progress through the demographic transition at a pace similar to other regions. Making this assumption is questionable because fertility decline in Africa has generally proceeded more slowly than in other parts of the world, with several cases of “stalls” and even small fertility increases over time.

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