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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Guest Contributor

    Improving America’s Ecological Security Requires Public-Private Partnerships

    Guest Contributor  //  March 29, 2021  //  By Catherine E. Semcer
    shutterstock_551715508

    In January, President Biden joined other world leaders in committing to conserve 30 percent of their nations’ lands and oceans by 2030. Also known as “30 by 30,” the pledge aligns government action with the growing recognition by the intelligence community that the loss of ecosystems and biodiversity presents serious risks to the U.S. economy and national security. Risks to the U.S. include the expanded likelihood of wildlife-borne diseases spilling over into our communities, water system challenges, decreased crop production, and increased natural disasters like floods. 

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    Topics: biodiversity, conservation, environment, environmental security, Guest Contributor, protected areas
  • China Environment Forum  //  Guest Contributor

    The Unfinished Battle for Drinking Water Security in Post-poverty Rural China

    China Environment Forum  //  Guest Contributor  //  March 18, 2021  //  By Jiayuan Wang

    13255252258147021

    The Huangzhong district in Xining city, the capital of Qinghai Province, is home to 8,980 families, all of whom received assistance under China’s national policy to eradicate extreme poverty (below 2,300 yuan per person per year). Through social assistance and private sector financing, Huangzhong district succeeded in lifting all 28,706 residents out of extreme poverty after a four-year battle. In April 2019 the district proudly celebrated its official removal of the “poverty alleviation county” label. 

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    Topics: China Environment Forum, Guest Contributor
  • Guest Contributor

    Why Cities Matter

    Guest Contributor  //  March 15, 2021  //  By Blair A. Ruble
    Montreal,,Canada,-,November,25,,2017.,People,With,Motion,Blur

    Do you remember a year ago when many of us traveled regularly? Do you remember the experience of flying into a major city somewhere in the world, picking up your bags in a modern airport (that probably functioned more efficiently than in the United States), and getting a vehicle to take you downtown? After leaving the airport, we would often drive past miles of informal settlements—self-built shelters unkindly called “slums” much of the time. We may have even found ourselves asking why local authorities “don’t do something” about them.

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    Topics: development, Guest Contributor, migration, urbanization
  • What You Are Reading

    The Top 5 of February 2021

    What You Are Reading  //  March 9, 2021  //  By Amanda King
    Climate,Change,-,Antarctic,Melting,Glacier,In,A,Global,Warming

    Collapsing ice shelves raised concerns in 2020, but the immediate effects of climate change in the polar regions are merely the tip of the iceberg, write Olivia Popp and Michaela Stith in this month’s top post. What happens in the polar regions doesn’t always stay in the polar regions—it has profound effects on climate and communities around the world.

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    Topics: What You Are Reading
  • Guest Contributor

    Why Water Conflict is Rising, Especially on the Local Level

    Guest Contributor  //  March 2, 2021  //  By Peter Schwartzstein
    Karachi,,Pakistan,-,Dec,30:,Residents,Of,Baldia,Town,Are

    This article originally appeared on the Center for Climate and Security.

    That future wars will be fought over water, rather than oil, has become something of a truism, particularly with regard to the Middle East. It’s also one that most water experts have refuted time and time and time again. But while this preference for cooperation over conflict may (and emphasis on may) remain true of interstate disputes, this blanket aversion to the ‘water wars’ narrative fails to account for the rash of other water-related hostilities that are erupting across many of the world’s drylands. As neither full-on warfare nor issues that necessarily resonate beyond specific, sometimes isolated areas, these ‘grey zone’ clashes don’t seem to be fully registering in the broader discussion of water conflicts. In failing to adequately account for the volume of localized violence, the world is probably chronically underestimating the extent to which water insecurity is already contributing to conflict.

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    Topics: Africa, Asia, community-based, conflict, Guest Contributor, Middle East, security, water, water security
  • Africa in Transition  //  Covid-19  //  Guest Contributor

    Redesigning Health Systems for Global Health Security

    Africa in Transition  //  Covid-19  //  Guest Contributor  //  February 22, 2021  //  By Uzma Alam, Juliet Nabyonga-Orem, Mohammed Abdulaziz, Ambassador (ret.) Deborah R. Malac, John N. Nkengasong & Dr. Matshidiso R. Moeti
    Lebowakgomo,,Limpopo,,South,Africa,-04/26/2020,-,Community,Healthcare,Workers,Conduct

    This article originally appeared on The Lancet Global Health.

    Africa was predicted to be hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, given its poor health systems. However, this outcome has not been the case. Despite the U.S. being the highest spender on health care globally, COVID-19 has shown that its primary care infrastructure is in much need of strengthening. But we should not mistake COVID-19 as the biggest pandemic of our time. If anything, it is only a dry run, with other epidemics brewing on the horizon. Therefore, if the global community is serious about epidemic preparedness, global health security, and protecting the most vulnerable, we need to redesign health systems for resilience. Africa’s lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as from concurrent outbreaks of cholera, Ebola virus disease, yellow fever, and chikungunya, could provide a roadmap.

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    Topics: Africa, Africa in Transition, community-based, Covid-19, global health, Guest Contributor, health systems, infectious diseases
  • Guest Contributor

    Pan-African Response to COVID-19: New Forms of Environmental Peacebuilding Emerge

    Guest Contributor  //  February 8, 2021  //  By Elaine (Lan Yin) Hsiao, Fakunle Aremu & Ousseyni Kalilou
    Volunteers,At,The,Lagos,Food,Bank,Initiative,Outreach,To,Ikotun,

    Early predictions about COVID-19’s impacts on Africa suggested that the continent would be a disaster zone marked by weak medical systems collapsing under strain and undemocratic states failing to provide social services to destitute populations. These predictions did not come to pass. Instead, many countries across the continent stepped up early on to join the world in curtailing the spread of COVID-19. The second order effects of the virus have been significant, however. Despite the low numbers of infections and deaths, lockdowns and the decline of a large percentage of informal trade and commerce in Sub-Saharan Africa have sent the region’s economy into recession, with increased inflation rates, widespread unemployment, and increased food insecurity. It’s within this context that collaboration (internationally and within the continent, between governments, the private sector, and local communities) to protect the environment—and by extension enhance livelihoods, promote sustainable development, and achieve enduring peace—has taken new forms.

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    Topics: conflict, development, environment, environmental security, global health, Guest Contributor, security
  • Guest Contributor

    Climate Change in the Indian Farmers’ Protest

    Guest Contributor  //  February 4, 2021  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Haryana,,India,December,9,2020:,A,Sikh,Farmer,Showing,An

    This article, written by Zafar Imran, originally appeared in Le Monde diplomatique.

    The ongoing farmers’ movement in India has taken the world’s largest democracy by storm. Hundreds of thousands from all over the country have laid siege to New Delhi for more than two months. As both the protestors and the government dig their heels in, the chances of confrontation and violence are increasing by the day.

    MORE
    Topics: agriculture, climate change, democracy and governance, development, environment, environmental peacemaking, environmental security, Guest Contributor, international environmental governance, livelihoods
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