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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category funding.
  • New Research Links Water Security and Economic Growth

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  August 6, 2015  //  By Laura E. Turley
    Haiti-flooding

    While it is intuitively clear that economic growth is related to water security – understood here as both water availability and also exposure to water-related risks such as drought and floods – there has been very little empirical evidence of this relationship to date.

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  • Who Benefits From REDD+? Lessons From India, Tanzania, and Mexico

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  August 4, 2015  //  By Prakash Kashwan
    kalimantan

    REDD+, a global framework designed to reward governments for preserving forests, has pledged nearly $10 billion to developing countries. But minorities, indigenous people, the poor, and other marginalized groups that live in forest areas often end up paying more than their fair share of the costs of environmental cleanup and conservation while getting less in return. What can be done to change this?

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  • In Search of Higher Returns: Can Extractive Industries Help Build Peace?

    ›
    August 3, 2015  //  By Carley Chavara

    If you’re a government pondering the development of newly discovered natural resources, how do you avoid the so-called “resource curse” – the tendency of high value extractive resources, like oil, gas, or minerals, to, instead of prosperity, bring corruption, entrenched poverty, and even violence?

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  • Turning the Climate-Security Problem on Its Head: Geoff Dabelko Talks G7 ‘Climate for Peace’ Report

    ›
    On the Beat  //  July 29, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett

    Dabelko_smallConversations around climate change often take place at the “30,000-foot level,” said Ohio University Professor and ECSP Senior Advisor Geoff Dabelko in a recent radio interview with WOUB Public Media, based out of Athens, Ohio. Emission reductions, carbon concentrations, global temperatures. But a certain amount of change is already baked into the system and impacts are playing at in different ways around the world already.

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  • Lauri Romanzi on Rethinking Maternal Morbidity Care in a Historical Context

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  July 24, 2015  //  By Josh Feng

    Romanzi-smallIn May 1855, Dr. James Marion Sims opened the first obstetric fistula hospital in New York City. Just 40 years later, it closed, reflecting a sharp decline in maternal morbidity rates in the United States and other Western countries. The Waldorf Astoria Hotel now stands on the site of the former hospital. “We know that we have eradicated obstetric fistula in high income countries; it happened at the turn of the 20th century,” says Dr. Lauri Romanzi, project director of Fistula Care Plus, in this week’s podcast.

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  • Alex Evans, The Guardian

    Addis Financing Summit Leaves Questions – Will the SDGs Provide Answers?

    ›
    July 24, 2015  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Addis-Financing-Summit

    The original version of this article, by Alex Evans, appeared on The Guardian.

    Start with the good news from this week’s finance for development conference in Addis Ababa: at least it got the narrative right.

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  • Bixby Report Explains Cross-Cutting Effect of Family Planning on Food Security, Climate Change

    ›
    July 16, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett
    bixby photo

    “With current neglect of family planning, the UN’s recent projection of a 2100 world population of up to 12.3 billion is a possibility,” says a report from the University of California, San Francisco’s Bixby Center for Global Reproductive Health. Increased voluntary family planning efforts are needed, the authors contend, to meet existing demand for contraceptives, stabilize the threat of global food insecurity, and reduce carbon emissions that contribute to climate change.

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  • 50 Years of Family Planning at USAID: Successes, Political Challenges, and Future Directions

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  July 10, 2015  //  By Josh Feng
    Indonesia

    Since President Lyndon B. Johnson created the USAID population program in 1965, it has evolved in tandem with the global discourse on population and demography. “The agency’s family planning program is as relevant today as it ever was, and is necessary,” said Jennifer Adams, deputy assistant administrator of the U.S. Agency of International Development’s Bureau for Global Health. The bureau houses the Office of Population and Reproductive Health, which implements U.S. development and relief efforts to expand access to modern contraceptives, fight HIV/AIDS, reduce unsafe abortions, and protect the health of women and children. [Video Below]

    MORE
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