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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Does Climate Change Kill Five Million People A Year? DARA’s 2012 Climate Vulnerability Monitor

    ›
    November 27, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere & Schuyler Null

    Five million people die each year due to climate- or carbon-related causes, and total mortality by 2030 could total 100 million people, according to new report from DARA, a nonprofit organization that works to improve aid to those affected by conflict and climate change and quantify the global cost of climate change and carbon use. But the report has drawn some fire for being too alarmist.

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  • Feminized Development in Latin America: Understanding the Confluence of Gender Equity and Cultural Tensions

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    From the Wilson Center  //  November 26, 2012  //  By Payal Chandiramani

    Poverty in Latin America has become increasingly “feminized,” said John Coonrod, executive vice president of The Hunger Project, at the Wilson Center on October 22. As a result, many governments and NGOs are starting to focus on the needs of women, especially indigenous women. [Video Below]

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  • India’s Environmental Security Challenge: Water, Coal, Natural Gas, and Climate Change Fuel Friction

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    November 23, 2012  //  By Michael Kugelman

    The original version of this article appeared in NATO Review.

    Few regions are more environmentally insecure than South Asia.

    The region faces rising sea levels and regularly experiences coastal flooding – of particular concern in a region with heavily populated and arable-land-rich coastal areas. Additionally, it is highly vulnerable to glacial melt. The Western Himalayas, which provide water supplies to much of South Asia, have experienced some of the most rapid melt in the world.

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  • Ravao’s Story: A Health and Environment Champion From Madagascar’s Mikea Forest

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    Beat on the Ground  //  Guest Contributor  //  November 21, 2012  //  By Vik Mohan

    The original version of this article, by Vik Mohan, appeared on Blue Ventures’ blog.

    I recently spent a hectic and intense couple of weeks in the village of Andavadoaka, where Blue Ventures’ community health project is based, during my annual visit to Madagascar. Although I founded our Safidy (meaning “choice”) health program several years ago, each return visit brings new and inspiring stories and lessons from our team on the ground.

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  • Edna Wangui on East Africa’s Changing Pastoralists

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    November 20, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    The fault line between nomadic pastoralists and sedentary agriculturalists in sub-Saharan Africa has emerged as one of the most dominant stories of climate-related conflict. But according to Edna Wangui, a professor at Ohio University who studies communities in Kenya and Tanzania, pastoralism is different from many people’s perceptions.

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  • Can Family Planning Save Millions From Malnutrition in a Warming World?

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    November 19, 2012  //  By Payal Chandiramani & Schuyler Null

    As the effects of climate change become increasingly apparent, existing poverty and human security challenges are being compounded. Among them, food security is one of the most pressing, especially in the developing world.

    Based on a model developed by researchers at Futures Group, a pilot project in Ethiopia reveals that a lower fertility track for some countries could help compensate for the negative effects of climate change on agricultural yields. The study, conducted by MEASURE Evaluation and funded by USAID and The David and Lucile Packard Foundation, suggests incorporating family planning into existing climate change adaptation strategies.

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  • Linking Academia With Policy: Youth and Land Markets in Urban Development

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    From the Wilson Center  //  November 16, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    “It’s always important when working in policy to consider what we can do beyond conception and look at more implementation,” said Valerie Stahl of New York University at the Wilson Center last month.

    Stahl was one of three graduate students presenting their winning papers for an annual academic paper competition, “Reducing Urban Poverty,” co-sponsored by the Wilson Center, USAID, International Housing Coalition, Cities Alliance, and the World Bank. This year’s competition was the third in an effort to better link new academic work on urban issues to actual policymaking. [Video Below]

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  • Climate and Conflict in East Africa, and UNEP’s Plan to Avoid Future Famines

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    Reading Radar  //  November 16, 2012  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    While climate change will undoubtedly have an impact on societies throughout the world, researchers are still debating whether or not it will cause conflict. John O’Loughlin, Frank D.W. Witmer, Andrew M. Linke, Arlene Laing, Andrew Gettelman, and Jimy Dudhia use a quantitative approach to tackle some of “sweeping generalizations” that have come to characterize this debate in a new study, “Climate Variability and Conflict Risk in East Africa, 1990-2009,” published last month in PNAS. They found that while there is “no statistically significant relationship” between precipitation and conflict, increased heat is correlated with more conflict in East Africa. Still, they also found that other factors, like population size and the space-time lag for violence, predict conflict more reliably than either of the climate-related elements.

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