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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Lesotho.
  • Sexuality Education Begins to Take Root in Africa

    ›
    Africa in Transition  //  Guest Contributor  //  March 24, 2020  //  By Robert Engelman
    engelman photo

    In Kenya, primary and secondary school students take courses called Life Skills Education. So do students in Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, and Swaziland. South Sudan adds “peace-building” to the subject title. Lesotho, Madagascar, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia are more direct. These countries add the word “sexuality” to the course name.

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  • In Lesotho, Population Pressures Have Created a Perfect Storm of Human Insecurity

    ›
    Behind the Headlines  //  July 17, 2017  //  By Anuj Krishnamurthy
    Lesotho

    Since declaring its independence in 1966, Lesotho has faced severe challenges to virtually every dimension of human security, writes Eugene Linden in a recent New York Times opinion article. In recent years, drought – coupled with widespread soil erosion and rapid population growth – has pushed a large portion of Lesotho’s two million people to the verge of starvation, which Linden calls “just one example of how fragile the future seems for Africa, large parts of which face the prospect of new famine and, in consequence, further catastrophic displacement within and among their growing populations.”

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  • Inside a Data-Driven Attempt to Fight Spoilage in U.S. Food Aid

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  July 19, 2016  //  By Mark Brennan
    mark2-food-aid

    Today, as El Niño-related droughts impact communities across East and Southern Africa, food aid shipment and distribution networks have shifted into high gear. From the U.S. Agency for International Development to the United Nations World Food Program and NGOs like CARE and Save the Children, food aid providers are stocking port warehouses in Djibouti and South Africa, as well as inland warehouses in countries like Ethiopia, Zimbabwe, and Lesotho.

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  • Cooperation Is Not Enough: Why We Need to Think Differently About Water

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  May 19, 2015  //  By Naho Mirumachi
    Mekong-dam

    In 2003, the United Nations General Assembly declared 2005 to 2015 to be the decade of “water for life” as a way to encourage countries to reach their water-related targets under the Millennium Development Goals. In summing up the last 10 years, it was noted that water cooperation had been promoted widely, featuring at international fora and in government initiatives and development agendas. Water cooperation is described as having the potential to enable peace and sustainable development. However, just as focusing on “water wars”  might undermine the everyday challenges of securing safe and adequate supplies of water, focusing only on “more cooperation” may well simplify the problem at hand.

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