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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • More Than Local: How PHE Can Help Solve Humanity’s Biggest Problems

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  December 2, 2013  //  By William Pan
    shopping-district

    “Leave enough for everyone.” That’s what my mother used to tell us at dinner. However, the holiday season reminds me that human nature is far from innately moderate in consumption. With Black Friday as a kickoff, consumers will spend more than $600 billion by Christmas in the United States alone. As I witness droves of shoppers running through malls and stores, I wonder if their desire is driven by some insatiable appetite for their favorite products or something more fundamental about human nature.

    MORE
  • Anthropocene Visualized: Video Summarizes Key Findings of IPCC Fifth Assessment Report

    ›
    Eye On  //  November 29, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass

    “Humanity is altering Earth’s life support system. Carbon dioxide emissions are accelerating; greenhouse gas levels are unprecedented in human history,” says a new video summarizing some of the most striking finds of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s latest report. The climate system is changing rapidly, and it is “extremely likely,” the video quotes the IPCC, that humans are the central reason why.

    MORE
  • Dark Forests: Interview With Bopha Phorn on Investigating Land Deals, Logging, Gender Issues in Cambodia

    ›
    Beat on the Ground  //  November 26, 2013  //  By Donald Borenstein
    cambodia-forests

    Cambodia is a young democracy in transition. It has the highest rate of urbanization in Southeast Asia, but the lowest percentage of current urban dwellers and widespread poverty. The Mekong River, on which millions of rural Cambodians rely, is being dammed at a rapid pace, both upstream, beyond the country’s borders, and within. Aided by weak land laws, both foreign and domestic industrial forces have staked claim to large swaths of the country for logging and rubber plantations, displacing thousands.

    MORE
  • Bringing Natural Resources to the Table: ELI, UNEP Launch New Environmental Peacebuilding Platform

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  November 25, 2013  //  By Tim Kovach
    sierra-leone

    To date, despite their demonstrated importance in both conflict recovery and the risk of conflict recurrence, natural resources have been largely ignored or downplayed in post-conflict settings around the world.

    MORE
  • Roger-Mark De Souza on Illuminating the Connections Between Population Dynamics, Resilience, Conflict

    ›
    Friday Podcasts  //  November 22, 2013  //  By Donald Borenstein
    Roger-Mark at George Washington University podcast

    “When you look at the resiliency literature, there’s very often discussion around population and population dynamics, but no one ever knows what to do with it,” says ECSP Director Roger-Mark De Souza in this week’s podcast.

    MORE
  • PHE Mythbusting at the International Conference on Family Planning

    ›
    November 21, 2013  //  By Roger-Mark De Souza
    ICFP-sign

    I’ve just returned from the International Conference on Family Planning (ICFP) in Ethiopia where integrated population, health, and environment (PHE) programs had a strong showing. More than 16 sessions over three days at the conference incorporated PHE themes, including panels on communicating complexity around family planning, conservation and human rights; how PHE helps accelerate the fertility transition in rural Ethiopia; and meaningful ways of linking population and family planning to climate change and sustainable development in Africa. Blue Ventures, one of PHE’s strongest voices, was given one of the first ever Excellence in Leadership for Family Planning awards. At this global meeting of family planning experts, PHE was clearly and squarely at the center.

    MORE
  • Lisa Palmer, Yale Forum on Climate Change and the Media

    Feeding 9 Billion on a Hot and Hungry Planet

    ›
    On the Beat  //  November 20, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    feeding-9-billion

    The original version of this article, by Lisa Palmer, appeared on The Yale Forum on Climate Change and the Media.

    Humans, it’s no secret, are versatile and unpredictable in how they use their land. We build mega-cities in deserts, raise crops on flood plains, live along vulnerable coast lines enjoying seas dangerously rising, and burn rain forests to create new pastures.

    MORE
  • Population-Environment Program Wins Recognition: Blue Ventures Honored at International Conference on Family Planning

    ›
    On the Beat  //  November 19, 2013  //  By Schuyler Null
    Blue-Ventures-award

    This year’s International Conference on Family Planning (ICFP) happened to coincide with the UN’s annual climate change summit. Perhaps it’s apt then that one of the organizations recognized for excellence is helping to bridge the gap between the environment and family planning communities.

    MORE
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