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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • The Climate Footprint of Plastics and the Need for a Global Solution

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  January 13, 2022  //  By Justin Bernstein
    pile of plastic waste

    U.S. efforts to reclaim its climate change leadership, as demonstrated at COP26 in Glasgow, will be undermined if the country does not also step up and accelerate action on reducing plastic waste. Plastic is packing a serious carbon punch along its entire supply chain, from oil extraction and manufacturing to disposal. According to Beyond Plastic’s new report, The New Coal: Plastics and Climate Change, the U.S. plastic industry’s contribution to climate change will exceed that of coal by the year 2030.

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  • The First-Ever White House Maternal Health Day of Action – Access to Care is Critical

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    Dot-Mom  //  On the Beat  //  January 12, 2022  //  By Chanel Lee
    Portrait,Of,Enjoy,Happy,Love,Family,African,American,Mother,Playing

    “Regardless of income level, regardless of education level, Black women, Native women, women who live in rural areas are more likely to die or be left scared or scarred from an experience that should be safe and should be a joyful one; and we know a primary reason why this is true – systemic inequities,” said Vice President Kamala Harris during her opening remarks at the first-ever White House Maternal Health Call to Action Summit on December 7, 2021. Members of Congress and maternal health advocates gathered to discuss the importance of addressing racial disparities and systemic challenges in maternal health through national policy.

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  • No, There Will Not Be a War for Water

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    Guest Contributor  //  January 10, 2022  //  By Jeroen Warner & Sumit Vij
    Hyderabad,telangana,india,,November,20,,2019,,An,Indian,Man,Carries,Water,In

    Some people falsely believe that the Afghanistan takeover by the Taliban during a drought increases the risk of violence over shared waters such as the Helmand and Kabul Rivers. Violent clashes over scarce resources have been predicted as “likely,” or even “certain” for 35 years, and despite such “water wars” never having happened, hypotheses about them keep cropping up around conflict-affected regions such as the Middle East and South Asia. In reality, conflicts are multidimensional with social, political, economic, and ecological drivers producing conflicts through their complex interrelations. Because of these multidimensional conflict drivers, the water war message is wrong-headed and needlessly scaremongering.

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  • The Top 5 Posts of December 2021

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    What You Are Reading  //  January 7, 2022  //  By Emily Allen
    11191502395_3799a404e2_o

    On the 34th anniversary of the assassination of Burkina Faso’s former President, Thomas Sankara, Richard Cincotta explored his legacy of economic and gender development in December’s top post. While present day Burkina Faso did not follow the development track Sankara set in motion, similar model countries, like Tunisia, were able to create social progress through similar policies.

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  • When Climate Change Meets Geopolitics

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    Guest Contributor  //  January 4, 2022  //  By Giulio Boccaletti
    51267299702_22c828ee01_o

    Deteriorating security in Ethiopia, a country W.E.B. Dubois once described as where “the sunrise of human culture took place,” is deeply concerning. The last few months have seen a dramatic involution for a country that was once a poster child for sustainable development. The conflict between the government and rebel forces in Tigray is not just a matter of regional security, but a significant blow to the world’s efforts to fight climate change.

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  • Merging the Environmental and Security Sectors in Climate Risk Responses

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    Guest Contributor  //  Q&A  //  January 3, 2022  //  By Alexis Eberlein
    Šabac,,Serbia,-,May,18,,2014:,People,Put,Sandbags,To

    Environmental security notions have evolved over the past 30 years. Once a sub-field of Security and Peace Studies focusing on how environmental issues correlate with modern security theories and policies, the concept is rapidly merging environmental and security sectors. Former Greek Naval Officer in the Hellenic Navy and current environmental security scholar Dimitrios Kantemnidis’ expertise sits at the center of the two merging fields. His military background informs perspectives on growing environmental security risks and potential responses for civilian and military actors.

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  • Caring for Those Who Give Care: How COVID-19 Created a Crisis for Caregivers

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    Covid-19  //  Dot-Mom  //  On the Beat  //  December 22, 2021  //  By Claire Hubley
    Rear,Close,Up,View,Aged,Grey-haired,Mother,Cuddles,Her,Grown

    “We’re always coping with a change,” said Denise Brown, Founder of the Caregiving Years Training Academy and a caregiver for her elderly parents. “And the change is often outside of our control.” She spoke at a recent event focused on the caregiving crisis, hosted by EMD Serono, the healthcare business of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany in the United States and Canada. When the doors to daycares, elder day residences, and adult care facilities closed at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, many Americans had to step into caregiving roles. “We’re doing our best to manage the change and keep going,” said Brown. “Because so many people rely on us and depend on us, we have to keep going.”

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  • Top 5 Posts of November 2021

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    What You Are Reading  //  December 17, 2021  //  By Emily Allen
    shutterstock_559737232-645x333 (1)

    Earlier this year, the U.S. National Intelligence Council shared five scenarios for global development in 2040, and the OECD released three scenarios for global cooperation in 2035. In our top post last month, Steven Gale, Ana Fernandes, Krystel Montpetit, and Alanna Markle take a closer look at the differences and similarities between the two sets of scenarios, notably China’s role, growing fragmentation, increased digitalization, and a gradual breakdown in international cooperation and trade.

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