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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Egypt.
  • Venezuela’s Turn? Age Structure and Liberal Democracy in South America

    ›
    January 21, 2016  //  By Richard Cincotta
    Venezuela-Chavez-rally

    Venezuela seems suspended at a critical juncture. Following national elections in December, the opposition Democratic Unity Roundtable was set to occupy two thirds of the 167-seat National Assembly, an upset that would reduce the late Hugo Chávez’s United Socialist Party to a distant second place for the first time and given opposition legislators the power to enact sweeping political changes.

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  • De Souza: In Era of Man, Demography Needs to be Part of Environmental Security Discussion

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    Eye On  //  June 25, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett

    A new article from the Wilson Center’s own Roger-Mark De Souza explores how population trends can bolster community resilience in the face of climate change and other security threats. De Souza argues that demographic trends such as age structure help determine how well a population is able to respond to and bounce back from shocks, especially environmental ones like drought and famine.

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  • Adaptation, Resistance, or Subversion: How Will Water Politics Be Affected by Climate Change?

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 9, 2015  //  By Anders Jägerskog, Anton Earle & Ashok Swain
    bachaxiang

    One of the primary ways climate change is expected to affect international relations is through water. There are more than 270 bodies of water that cross over international boundaries, and various methodologies have identified several dozen that are particularly at risk for tension or conflict. So how is climate change affecting transboundary water politics? Are governments and institutions taking the threat seriously? A few years back, a group of researchers decided to focus on this question.

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  • Will Tunisia’s Democracy Survive? A View from Political Demography

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    May 12, 2015  //  By Richard Cincotta
    Tunisia-soldier

    Among the few bright spots in the 2015 Freedom in the World Report, the brightest may be Tunisia, which for the first time was assessed as “free” – Freedom House’s highest “freedom status” and for many political scientists the definitive indication of a liberal democracy. Tunisia is the only North African state to have been assessed as free since Freedom House began its worldwide assessment of political rights and civil liberties in 1972, and only the second Arab-majority state since Lebanon was rated free from 1974 to 1976.

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  • Interview With Michael Brown, UN Senior Mediation Expert in Natural Resources and Land Conflicts

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    April 8, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett
    Darfur_well

    Natural resources rarely feature during peacebuilding efforts, but there is growing evidence that’s a mistake. Unresolved natural resource management issues can make peace more fragile, while addressing them can act as a bridge toward cooperation.

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  • Combination of Climate Change and Youth Puts Some Countries at Risk of Fragility

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 23, 2015  //  By Janani Vivekananda
    Tahrir-Square

    Climate change and youthful demographics can combine to create security risks in already fragile contexts, according to a new report commissioned by UNICEF UK and co-authored by the London-based research organizations International Alert and the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

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  • Youth Bulge, Exclusionary Regimes, and the Islamic State’s Big Mistake

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 10, 2015  //  By Jack A. Goldstone
    Jordan-vigil2

    Last week, the Islamic State’s ignorance of the role of demography in their local success may have led them to overplay their hand. Seeking to dissuade Jordanians from following their government in actively supporting the alliance arrayed against them, they executed a captured Jordanian pilot in horrendous fashion, burning him alive. Yet Jordan is not like Syria or Iraq, where violence against westerners or Shi’a or other minorities has helped split people from their allegiance to the government. Instead, this act of violence seems to have unified Jordan’s Sunnis against the Islamic State for their actions against a fellow Sunni Muslim. Jordan has expanded its assault, striking dozens of targets in Iraq for the first time.

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  • UNFPA: World’s 1.8 Billion Young People Need to Be More Involved in Development

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    From the Wilson Center  //  December 17, 2014  //  By Sarah Meyerhoff
    unfpaswop1

    “A world in which a quarter of humanity is denied full enjoyment of their rights is an unjust world,” said Kate Gilmore, deputy executive director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). “It’s a world without the building blocks for human progress, for human peace, for human security.” [Video Below]

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