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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Denmark.
  • COVID-19 Shines Spotlight on Race and Gender Inequities in Healthcare

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    Covid-19  //  Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  May 12, 2020  //  By Deekshita Ramanarayanan
    49837047782_fa480c0713_c

    “While COVID-19 has wreaked havoc the world over, history has proven, and recent data agrees that the hardest hit will be the world’s women and girls and populations already impacted by racism and discrimination,” said Sarah Barnes, Project Director of the Maternal Health Initiative and Women and Gender Advisor at the Wilson Center, at a recent event on the impact of COVID-19 on race and gender inequities. Coronavirus has hurt women and girls in many ways. Among them, women have been pushed back into the home.  And healthcare workers and caregivers who are mostly women are jeopardizing their own health, caring for others.

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  • Can Demographic-Environmental Stress Contribute to Mass Atrocities? And the Future of Arctic Cooperation

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    Reading Radar  //  March 30, 2017  //  By Sara Merken

    hendrixfinalIn a brief published by the Stanley Foundation, Cullen Hendrix explores how “the degradation and overexploitation of renewable sources…and unequal access to these resources” can make societies more or less susceptible to experiencing mass atrocities. Hendrix proposes that “demographic-environmental stress” is most likely to contribute to mass atrocities (genocide, war crimes, or crimes against humanity) in agricultural societies that have a high level of group identity-driven politics and economics, exclusionary political institutions, political actors that deprive certain groups, or when governments have low legitimacy.

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  • Melting Ice Threatens to Expose Former U.S. Nuclear Base in Greenland

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    Guest Contributor  //  October 3, 2016  //  By Jeff Colgan & William Colgan
    AGU_1959_photo1

    Climate change is poised to remobilize hazardous wastes that the U.S. Army abandoned and believed would be buried forever beneath the snow and ice in Greenland.

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