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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Intersecting Challenges Require Multisectoral Solutions: A Conversation with Charles Kabiswa

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    Guest Contributor  //  April 18, 2023  //  By Kathleen Mogelgaard
    Kampala,,Uganda,-,Circa,November,2015:,Busy,Life,In,Downtown

    The impacts of a changing climate touch every region of the globe, but they are acutely felt by people in Uganda, where floods, droughts, and shifting rainfall patterns disrupt agricultural productivity, livelihoods, and the health and well-being of millions of people. According to the ND-GAIN index, Uganda is the 13th most vulnerable nation in the world, and action there is urgently needed to better prepare for and adapt to climate change’s impacts.

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  • Militaries, Metals, and Mining

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    Guest Contributor  //  April 17, 2023  //  By Fabian Villalobos & Morgan Bazilian
    4555163751_a675a93a10_c

    In the early 1960s, Soviet fulfillment officers at the Berezniki and Zaporozh’ye ilmenite mines must have noticed an uptick in worldwide demand for titanium. Orders for titanium sponge were increasing around the globe, and the Soviet Union reacted by increasing production rapidly.

    Yet some of these deliveries resulting from this boost in production were not reaching their intended customers. In fact, some of their customers didn’t even exist. Little did the Soviet producers know that it was actually the CIA on the receiving end of these shipments.

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  •  A Warmer, Wetter Climate Challenges a Chinese Eco-farm 

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    China Environment Forum  //  Cool Agriculture  //  Guest Contributor  //  April 14, 2023  //  By Jiang Mengnan
    Washing-vegetbles-Zhiliangtian-ecofarm_Ma-Yanwei

    This article was originally published on China Dialogue under the Creative Commons BY NC ND license. 

    In recent years, a new narrative has appeared on Chinese social media: that a warmer and wetter climate in Northwest China will herald a return to the “golden age” of the Tang dynasty (618–907 AD). 

    Climate change will bring benefits, so the story goes, as historically China has flourished during warmer and wetter periods – conditions becoming common once more in the Northwest, a region extending from the province of Shaanxi to Xinjiang in the far west.

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  • Healthy Women, Healthy Economies: Translating Evidence to Impact

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    Dot-Mom  //  April 12, 2023  //  By Sophia DeLuca
    IMG-6612

    “Women’s economic participation promotes economic growth and security. It’s good for the women involved. It’s good for the girls who dream of following in their footsteps,” said Ambassador Mark Green, President and CEO of the Wilson Center at a recent Women’s History Month private event in Washington, DC hosted by the Wilson Center and EMD Serono, the healthcare business of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany.

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  • Climate and Coastal Adaptation: The Need for Urgent Planning

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    Guest Contributor  //  April 11, 2023  //  By Anders Beal
    San,Jacinto,,Manabi,Ecuador,February,10,2016,,High,Tides,,Combined

    The latest report from the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change highlights the small window of opportunity available to achieve climate resilient development, despite the growing risks of reaching tipping points. Environmental advocates argue that the UN’s warnings should remain front-and-center, including those that highlight worsening climate trends already experienced by developing nations.

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  • Shaken to The Core: The Plight of Syrian Refugees After February’s Earthquake

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    Guest Contributor  //  April 10, 2023  //  By Muhammad Tahir
    Hatay-Antaya-DS-Edits-16

    Madiha vaguely remembers her family fleeing war-torn Syria. But even a decade later, she still bursts into tears describing their midnight escape across the border to Turkey. She and her family were forced to flee after losing family members in a civil war in which they had no stake.

    Little did Madiha—who is now 11 years old—and her family know they would experience another monumental trauma a decade later. This time, it was a 7.8 magnitude earthquake that rocked large swaths of southern Turkey on early February 6, 2023.

    The roof they built with their own hands collapsed over their heads, killing several of Madiha’s nieces and siblings. “A large piece of brick fell on my mother’s leg, but she luckily survived,” she said tearfully. 

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  • Building Global Collaboration on Infrastructure: A Conversation with Amos Hochstein

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    April 7, 2023  //  By Claire Doyle

    Screen Shot 2023-04-06 at 11.22.32 PMToday’s geopolitical climate, paired with the accelerating energy transition, means it is more important than ever to collaborate on international infrastructure investments. This episode of the New Security Broadcast features a recent Wilson Center panel discussion with Amos Hochstein, Special Presidential Coordinator for Global Infrastructure and Energy Security. Moderated by Mark Kennedy, Director of the Wilson Center’s Wahba Institute for Strategic Competition, and Wilson Center Global Fellow Sharon Burke, the conversation explores what U.S. cooperation—with both developed and developing countries—should look like to ensure that the unfolding technology and energy revolutions contribute to diplomacy and benefit all countries.

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  • Women’s Leadership: Efforts to Close the Gender Gap

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    Dot-Mom  //  April 5, 2023  //  By Maternal Health Initiative Staff
    Screenshot 2023-04-04 at 9.23.53 AM

    In this Women’s History Month edition of Wilson Center NOW, Women’s Leadership: Efforts to Close the Gender Gap, John Milewski, Moderator of the Wilson Center NOW series, interviews Sarah Barnes, Project Director for the Wilson Center’s Maternal Health Initiative, and Samantha Karlin, Founder and CEO of Empower Global, a gender consulting firm that works with organizations to help them better recruit, retain, and advance women. They discuss feminist leadership, women in the think tank space, and the work remaining to achieve gender equality. The 2023 Women’s History Month theme is Women Who Tell Our Stories.

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