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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Germany.
  • Talking Science: Climate Change and Health Communications in a Skeptical Era

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  January 8, 2014  //  By Laura Henson

    Communicating complex scientific concepts to general audiences is difficult given today’s information overload. Capturing the attention of time-pressed policymakers long enough to explain multifaceted issues like climate change and global health is an even greater challenge. The Environmental Communications Division of the National Communication Association co-sponsored two panels at the Wilson Center on November 22 featuring communication directors and professors of communications to explore this issue. [Video Below]

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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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  • Carl Haub, Demographics Revealed

    A Tale of Four Pyramids

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    April 30, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    The original version of this article, by Carl Haub, appeared on Demographics Revealed.

    There has been quite a bit made in the media and in blogs about low birth rates in industrialized countries. Quite correctly, many people (and countries!) are concerned that unprecedented aging and a dearth of younger people are leading to serious pressure on national budgets from a rising burden of support for the elderly because of  a declining group of tax-paying workers. But the situation is far from equal everywhere, and less is written about that.

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