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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Africa.
  • Avoiding the Resource Curse in East Africa’s Oil and Natural Gas Boom

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  February 14, 2013  //  By Jill Shankleman

    This year, Texas-based Anadarko and Italian partner ENI are due to make the final investment decision on whether to construct one of the largest liquefied natural gas facilities in the world in Mozambique. The complex would allow them to tap into deep off-shore gas fields that could rival Australia and Qatar as the largest liquefied natural gas reserves in the world.

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  • Behind the Numbers

    Reproductive Health and Population Issues in the MDGs: An Interview With Stan Bernstein

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    February 8, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article appeared on the Population Reference Bureau’s Behind the Numbers blog.

    Stan Bernstein, a retired UNFPA senior policy adviser and former health adviser on the UN Millennium Project, recently attended the Seventh Annual Research Conference on Population, Reproductive Health, and Economic Development in Oslo, Norway. During the conference, Bernstein reflected on the presence of reproductive health and population issues among the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and their indicators. He also commented on prospects for including relevant reproductive health and population goals or indicators in the development agenda beyond 2015. Bernstein hailed the role of research from the PopPov network in the past and its potential contributions to future development agendas. He answers some questions for PRB below.

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  • Malaria and Maternal Health: Treating Pregnant Women Reveals Need for Integration

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    Dot-Mom  //  February 5, 2013  //  By Lauren Herzer Risi

    Ten years ago, a study was conducted in Mozambique to determine the impact of a new medicine for pregnant women with malaria. Over 1,000 women participated in a controlled trial of intermittent preventative treatment with sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine – half received a placebo, the other half received the actual drug. All were given an insecticide-treated net.

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  • Kagondu Njagi, AlertNet

    In Kenya, Water Stress Also Breeds Cooperation Between Competing Groups

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    January 29, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article, by Kagondu Njagi, appeared on Thomson Reuters’ AlertNet.

    By the time the violence had died down, more than 80 people lay dead and hundreds were left homeless.

    Yet there was scarcely enough water – the resource the Maasai and Kikuyu tribes were fighting over – to wash away the blood that had stained this part of Kenya’s Rift Valley.

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  • Rachel Yavinsky, Behind the Numbers

    Energy-Saving Stoves and Family Planning Benefit Women and Families in Rural Uganda

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    January 23, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article, by Rachel Yavinsky, appeared on the Population Reference Bureau’s Behind the Numbers blog.

    After 45 minutes on Lake Victoria in a wooden fishing boat, my PRB colleague and I arrived on Busi Island, one of the Ugandan sites of the HOPE-LVB (Health of People and the Environment – Lake Victoria Basin) project. PRB, who partners on this project, came to Busi Island to see HOPE-LVB in action.

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  • Building a Global Network of Maternal Health Policymakers

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    Dot-Mom  //  January 18, 2013  //  By Sandeep Bathala

    On day three of the 2013 Global Maternal Health Conference here in Arusha, Tanzania, I was joined by the Global Health Initiative’s partners to present the results of the Wilson Center’s four-year-old Advancing Dialogue on Maternal Health Series. This series is unique in its convening power, helping to bring together experts and policymakers from around the world to collaborate on a shared goal: healthier mothers and children.

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  • Measuring Sustainable Development in Ethiopia’s Guraghe Zone

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    Guest Contributor  //  January 11, 2013  //  By Alexon Ayele

    This miniseries focuses on the monitoring and evaluation of PHE projects in Ethiopia.

    Despite progress over the years, Ethiopia’s Guraghe zone, located in the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People’s Region, faces many development challenges. As senior monitoring and evaluation officer in the Guraghe People’s Self-help Development Organization (GPSDO), I have been working in this region for more than five years trying to reduce poverty and improve socio-economic development. The organization as a whole has been here for more than 50.

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  • Five Questions for Population, Health, and Environment Projects in Ethiopia

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    Guest Contributor  //  January 10, 2013  //  By Kristen Stelljes

    This miniseries focuses on the monitoring and evaluation of PHE projects in Ethiopia.

    Since the integrated population, health, and environment (PHE) approach is relatively new in international development, donors, partners, and implementers want to know how it’s improving people’s lives. In the PHE community, we believe that combining efforts to address natural resource management, reproductive health, and livelihoods is making a difference in places where rapid population growth combines with poverty and environment degradation. But to know for sure and be able to convince others, we need to have data to support those beliefs.

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