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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category UK.
  • Should the UN Security Council Take Up Climate Security Issues? Ken Conca on Institutional Change

    ›
    Friday Podcasts  //  May 20, 2016  //  By Sean Peoples

    Conca-smallAs the dust settles on the newly minted Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Paris climate agreement, countries have begun tackling operational questions aimed at limiting global warming to two degrees Celsius and ensuring peaceful, sustainable development.

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  • Ethiopian Drought Response a Sign of How Far We’ve Come and Where We Need to Go

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  May 17, 2016  //  By Greg Collins
    Ethiopia-food-assistance3

    Drought in Ethiopia, exacerbated by El Niño, has put more than 10 million people in a position of being unsure how long they will have food and where it will come from next. Inevitably, the drought has been compared to the infamous drought of 1983-1984 that led to the worst famine in the country’s history, making millions destitute, and contributing to the deaths of 400,000. But Ethiopia is in a very different place today than it was in 1983.

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  • Culture and Rights: The Struggle From Within to End Female Genital Cutting

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  Guest Contributor  //  April 25, 2016  //  By Anubha Bhonsle
    shadow into light

    Ashraf and Shazia use the word “guilt” often.* Their voices tremble as they rewind to the day when they read an article in an Indian magazine, Manorama, that opened their eyes to the reality of khatna – the practice of female genital mutilation among their community. “We felt guilt – immense, powerful guilt – when we realized that this was not needed, that we didn’t need to put our elder daughter through this,” the parents say. “We had no idea this was just going on, prevalent, generation after generation.”

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  • Rethinking Business As Usual: Leveraging the Private Sector to Strengthen Maternal Health

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  December 1, 2015  //  By Anna Bella Korbatov
    Salimus Clinic

    In 2013, nearly 300,000 women died during pregnancy and childbirth. The majority of those deaths were in developing countries and entirely preventable. Much of the effort towards reducing this number has been focused on what governments should do differently, but the private sector plays just as important a role as the public sector, said a panel of experts at the Wilson Center on September 17. [Video Below]

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  • As Droughts, Floods, Die-Offs Proliferate, “Climate Trauma” a Growing Phenomenon

    ›
    September 9, 2015  //  By Carley Chavara
    Jowhar flood in Somalia

    According to recent polling, climate change is seen as the single most threatening international challenge around the world, and there’s evidence that all that worry is taking a psychological toll. Adding to droughts, floods, extreme weather, and die-offs, psychologists are observing higher levels of anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder in certain areas and professions. Even people who do not actively stress about global warming or view it as a major threat may still suffer psychological trauma from its effects.

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  • John Furlow on Better Coordination for Better Climate Adaptation

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    Friday Podcasts  //  August 28, 2015  //  By Carley Chavara

    Furlow-small“We [need to] stop treating ‘adaptation’ like a sector,” says John Furlow, climate change specialist at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), in this week’s podcast, “but start treating it as a stress or a risk that undermines the development sectors, the environmental sectors, the social sectors that we care about.”

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  • Turning the Climate-Security Problem on Its Head: Geoff Dabelko Talks G7 ‘Climate for Peace’ Report

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    On the Beat  //  July 29, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett

    Dabelko_smallConversations around climate change often take place at the “30,000-foot level,” said Ohio University Professor and ECSP Senior Advisor Geoff Dabelko in a recent radio interview with WOUB Public Media, based out of Athens, Ohio. Emission reductions, carbon concentrations, global temperatures. But a certain amount of change is already baked into the system and impacts are playing at in different ways around the world already.

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  • Alice Hill on Mainstreaming Climate Risks Into U.S. Government Planning: “We Should Care Deeply”

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    Friday Podcasts  //  July 17, 2015  //  By Carley Chavara

    hill“Perhaps I’m a case study for what happens in the federal government when we start on a tough problem,” says Alice Hill, the senior director for resilience policy at the National Security Council and former senior counselor to the secretary of homeland security, in this week’s podcast.

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