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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • From Ethiopia to Egypt, Girls’ Education Programs Combat Child Marriage

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  July 22, 2013  //  By Swara Salih
    Child brides in Darfur

    According to the UN Population Fund, more than 140 million girls will become child brides between 2011 and 2020 – an estimated 14.2 million young girls marrying too young every year or 39,000 daily. The majority of these girls do not receive access to education or reproductive health services. [Video Below]

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  • Lisa Friedman: Bangladesh Shows Importance of Expanding Coverage of Climate-Induced Migration

    ›
    Friday Podcasts  //  On the Beat  //  July 19, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass
    Lisa-Friedman-podcast2

    “What I found in Bangladesh was that [climate migration] wasn’t a straight line,” says Lisa Friedman in this week’s podcast. It’s “a far more complicated story.”

    Friedman is the deputy director of ClimateWire, a news service that brings readers daily information related to climate change and its effects on business and society. At the launch of ECSP’s new report, Backdraft: The Conflict Potential of Climate Mitigation and Adaptation, Friedman discussed her experiences reporting on climate-induced migration in Bangladesh – one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change in the world, due to its low-lying geography, dense population, and high poverty levels.

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  • Reproductive Health Organizations Embrace Cross-Sectoral Partnerships in Africa

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  July 18, 2013  //  By Swara Salih
    Kenyan mother and child

    “The places in the world where the environment is most fragile, women’s health is most fragile,” said Leila Darabi, director of global communications for the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, at the Wilson Center. “The negative impacts on the environment tend to affect women the most. Women are the people who are planting kitchen gardens, women are traditional healers, and so they often feel the impact first when those things are degraded.”

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  • Reviewing USAID’s Global Health Activities, and the Status of Malnutrition Worldwide

    ›
    Reading Radar  //  July 17, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass

    USAID-Annual-Report-CoverUSAID’s annual report to Congress on its global health programs breaks down the broad array of initiatives carried out each year “from the American people” to prevent child and maternal deaths, provide safe access to water, combat infectious disease, and deliver HIV/AIDS relief, among other priorities. Maternal and child health are of particular focus, with the agency helping to launch the Child Survival Call to Action, London Summit on Family Planning, and U.S. Government Action Plan on Children in Adversity last year. The authors report significant declines in maternal and newborn mortality rates for priority countries and the establishment of “national contraceptive security strategies” in 36 out of 47 USAID-supported countries since 2003. “All of these efforts align under U.S. goals to end extreme poverty and promote peace and prosperity worldwide, which result in improved security at home and better markets for U.S. businesses abroad,” writes Assistant Administrator Dr. Ariel Pablos-Méndez.

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  • Mike Ives, Yale Environment 360

    Vietnam’s Rice Boom Has Steep Environmental Costs for Mekong Delta

    ›
    July 17, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Rice husks on the Mekong River, Vietnam

    The original version of this article, by Mike Ives, appeared on Yale Environment 360.

    Phan Dinh Duc leans against yellow sacks of freshly harvested rice. It’s a warm spring evening in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, and Duc, a local farmer, is waiting for traders to arrive by truck to purchase his produce and sell it on commodities markets. Beyond him lies a vast checkerboard of rice paddies, each filled with water and bordered by a network of canals and roughly 10-foot-high earthen dikes. They enable year-round rice cultivation in an area where, a half century ago, vast floodplains typically lay fallow for half the year and farmers planted one annual rice crop that grew in tandem with seasonal floods.

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  • Minegolia: China and Mongolia’s Mining Boom

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  Choke Point  //  July 16, 2013  //  By Clement Huaweilang Dai & David Tyler Gibson

    China’s economic boom appears to be contagious. Over the past few years, China’s northern neighbor has quietly caught the bug and become the world’s second-fastest growing economy, experiencing a GDP growth rate of approximately 17.3 percent in 2011. 

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  • Woman-Centered Maternity Care, Family Planning, and HIV: Principles for Rights-Based Integration

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  July 15, 2013  //  By Jacob Glass
    African-Maternity-Ward

    Despite increases in the availability of maternal health care across Nigeria, maternal mortality rates remain high, averaging 630 per 100,000 live births in 2010, compared to the world average of 210. “This is data we are not proud of,” said Philippa Momah, board director of Nigeria’s White Ribbon Alliance, at the Wilson Center. “We believe that one of the issues is the way health care providers treat our women. This may be causing a 20 percent drop-out rate in the health care system.” [Video Below]

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  • Harry Verhoeven, ChinaDialogue

    China Shifting Balance of Power in Nile River Basin

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  July 12, 2013  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Tekeze Dam, Ethiopia

    The original version of this article, by Harry Verhoeven, appeared on ChinaDialogue.

    The growing intensification of economic, political and social ties between China and Africa in the last 15 years is often told as a story of copper, petrodollars, emerging Chinatowns, and bilateral visits by heads of state.

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