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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Pakistan’s Unheralded Fight Against Climate Change

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  March 9, 2017  //  By Michael Kugelman
    Korangi-Pakistan

    The original version of this article appeared on The Third Pole.

    In recent months, the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) has been in the headlines – and for all the wrong reasons.

    MORE
  • Can We Save the World’s Remaining Forests? A Look at ‘Why REDD Will Fail’

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  March 8, 2017  //  By Bethany N. Bella
    Indonesia

    As climate change threatens the stability of ecosystems around the world, the preservation of forests is seen as a “win-win” solution to curbing planet-warming emissions while producing value for developing country economies.

    MORE
  • As More Aid Flows to Fragile States, a Call for a Better Approach

    ›
    March 7, 2017  //  By Sreya Panuganti

    Global poverty has been reduced dramatically over the past two decades. Less than 11 percent of the world’s population were living in extreme poverty in 2013 compared to 35 percent in 1990. But improvements have largely come in stable countries. Many of the remaining pockets of extreme poverty are in “fragile states,” countries that are vulnerable to internal and external shocks and can easily tip into crisis when faced with an environmental, economic, social, or political change.

    MORE
  • A Journalists’ Guide to Energy and the Environment in 2017

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  March 6, 2017  //  By Azua (Zizhan) Luo
    SEJ

    “Turbulent and possibly revolutionary times are ahead for U.S. energy and environmental policy,” said Bobby Magill, a senior science writer at Climate Central, at the Wilson Center on February 3. “If there’s one message the Trump Administration is sending about environmental and climate regulations, it’s this: The future will not look like the past.”

    MORE
  • Ground Truth Briefing: Is Climate-Related Migration a National Security Issue?

    ›
    Friday Podcasts  //  March 3, 2017  //  By Erica Martin

    migrant-campExperts predict that climate change will spur some people to leave their homes and countries. How will national security be affected as a result?

    MORE
  • Sharon Guynup, Mongabay

    Axing “Conflict Minerals” Rule Also Threatens DRC’s Endangered Grauer Gorillas

    ›
    March 2, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Grauer-Gorilla

    The original version of this article, by Sharon Guynup, appeared on Mongabay.

    For weeks, the primatologists had followed a group of Grauer’s gorillas over rugged terrain – hacking through dense rainforest; following knife-edged ravines; and crossing a nearly impenetrable mountainous landscape in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

    MORE
  • Climate and Human Change in Biodiversity Hotspots, and Assessing the Tradeoffs of Bolivia’s Quinoa Craze

    ›
    Reading Radar  //  March 1, 2017  //  By Sara Merken

    PLOSIn a recent article published in PLOS ONE, Juliann E. Aukema, Narcisa G. Pricope, Gregory J. Husak, and David Lopez-Carr address the impacts of climate change and population growth on areas with vulnerable ecosystem services and biodiversity, and in reverse, how degraded ecosystem services effect vulnerable populations. The authors analyze locations between 50 degrees latitude north and south that had changing precipitation patterns in the past 30 years.

    MORE
  • Top 10 Posts for February 2017

    ›
    What You Are Reading  //  March 1, 2017  //  By Schuyler Null
    Feb-top-10

    John Oldfield called it: last month’s most popular story was once again on the U.S. Global Water Strategy. The Wilson Center’s Sherri Goodman, Ruth Greenspan Bell, and Nausheen Iqbal, like Oldfield before them, urged the new administration to take seriously the development of the strategy, due later this year, and provide “stronger American leadership” on global water issues.

    MORE
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