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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Blair A. Ruble, Urban Sustainability Laboratory

    Making Cities Work as Holistic Communities of Promise

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  May 25, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    San-Francisco

    The original version of this article, by Blair A. Ruble, appeared on the Urban Sustainability Laboratory.

    Shortly after the completion of the Empire State Building, the novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald was shattered by a visit to its observation deck. “Full of vaunting pride,” he wrote, “the New Yorker had climbed here, and seen with dismay what he had never suspected. That the city was not the endless succession of canyons that he had supposed, but that it had limits, fading out into the country on all sides into an expanse of green and blue. That alone was limitless. And with the awful realization that New York was a city after all and not a universe, the whole shining edifice that he had reared in his mind came crashing down.”

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  • Miners Plunder Tamil Nadu’s Sands, Dropping Some Rivers by 50 Feet

    ›
    Choke Point  //  May 24, 2017  //  By Sibi Arasu
    Oxcart

    The seventh in a series of reports by Circle of Blue and the Wilson Center on the global implications of water, energy, and food challenges in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

    CHENNIMALAI, India – There is river and beach sand aplenty in Tamil Nadu. At 130,000 square kilometers (50,200 square miles), the state is about the same size as Nicaragua and has 95 rivers with sandy bottoms and a long Bay of Bengal shoreline. Or did. For almost all of its thousand-year history, the state of Tamil Nadu took all that sand for granted. No longer.

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  • Roger-Mark De Souza on the Paris Climate Agreement, With or Without the U.S.

    ›
    Eye On  //  From the Wilson Center  //  May 23, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    “A lack of U.S. government support for the Paris climate agreement will mean that the United States will further isolate itself from international collaboration and cooperation on multiple fronts. It will affect U.S. security, the provision of jobs; U.S. business operations, and U.S. diplomatic efforts. The agreement, because it has a broad basis of support, will continue with or without the United States.”

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  • Wilson Center’s Lisa Palmer Launches ‘Hot, Hungry Planet’

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  May 22, 2017  //  By Winter Wilson
    Ethiopia

    A steadily increasing global population, growing food demand, and changing climate necessitate new kinds of thinking in agriculture but also fields like public health and energy, concludes a new book, Hot, Hungry Planet, by former Wilson Center Public Policy Scholar and current Senior Fellow at the National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center Lisa Palmer.

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  • Christophe Angely on Overcoming Pessimism for the Sahel

    ›
    Friday Podcasts  //  May 19, 2017  //  By Winter Wilson

    mentaoThe Sahel region of Africa is a wide band that marks the transition from the Sahara Desert in the north to the wetter, sub-tropical regions in the south. The Sahelian countries have some of the most rapidly growing populations in the world and have faced significant environmental change over the past century. In recent years, insurgencies have surged in several countries, new terrorist groups have become active, there have been several droughts, and migration has increased.

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  • The Right to Life and Water: Drought and Turmoil for Coke and Pepsi in Tamil Nadu

    ›
    Choke Point  //  May 18, 2017  //  By Keith Schneider
    protests

    The sixth in a series of reports by Circle of Blue and the Wilson Center on the global implications of water, energy, and food challenges in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

    TIRUNELVELI, India – Just after dusk on a warm mid-January evening, attorney DA Prabakar greeted several visitors on the dimly lit street in front of his home here in southern India. The air was desert-dry and dusty in this rain-scarce river city.

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  • Risk, But Also Opportunity in Climate Fragility and Terror Link

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  May 17, 2017  //  By Florian Krampe
    Mali2

    In a recent article for New Security Beat, Colin Walch made the case that the abandonment of some communities in Mali to deal with climate change on their own has created “fertile ground” for jihadist recruitment. In a similar argument, Katharina Nett and Lukas Rüttinger in a report for adelphi asserted last month that “large-scale environmental and climatic change contributes to creating an environment in which [non-state armed groups] can thrive and opens spaces that facilitate the pursuit of their strategies.”

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  • Too Much, Too Soon: Addressing Over-Intervention in Maternity Care

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  May 16, 2017  //  By Nancy Chong
    Mexico-City

    For years, the primary approach to improving global maternal health was additive – to increase capacity to address shortfalls in clinics, doctors, supplies, information, and skilled care. Today, however, some women are experiencing issues related to the opposite problem: too much.

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