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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Nigeria.
  • What Climate Conflict Looks Like: Recent Findings and Possible Responses

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  December 16, 2014  //  By Jeffrey Stark
    Carrying-Firewood-Tillabery

    Climate change and conflict – what’s the relationship? In a recently completed set of field-based studies for USAID, the Foundation for Environmental Security and Sustainability set aside “yes-or-no” questions about whether climate change causes conflict and replaced them with pragmatic and politically informed questions about how climate change is consequential for conflict in specific fragile states.

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  • Safety and Security in the Global Youth Wellbeing Index

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  December 9, 2014  //  By Nicole Goldin

    Few would argue with the notion that socioeconomic development is contingent on peace, safety, and security. What goes for nations, goes for people too – especially young people.

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  • Feeding Unrest: A Closer Look at the Relationship Between Food Prices and Sociopolitical Conflict

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  December 8, 2014  //  By Todd G. Smith
    Kidal-Mali

    From the Roman poet Juvenal’s observations about bread and circuses to Marie Antoinette’s proclamation, “let them eat cake!” the link between food and political stability is well established in pop culture. In academic and policy circles, however, it’s a source of considerable debate.

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  • Necessary Partners: The Sahel Shows Why Development and Resilience Efforts Can’t Forget Men

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  November 19, 2014  //  By Allison Shean
    Niger-Sean-Sheridan111

    One-third of boys in the developing world don’t face the risk of marriage and pregnancy before age 18. There are no laws preventing men from owning land or property. Men don’t bear the brunt of increasingly frequent and severe disasters. And men don’t hold fewer than 25 percent of parliamentary seats worldwide.

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  • Dividend or Divide? Africa’s Demographic Challenge

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  November 17, 2014  //  By Sarah Meyerhoff
    kampala_oldtaxipark

    “Sub-Saharan Africa’s young people are in effect the global labor force of the future,” said Jack Goldstone at the Wilson Center on October 15. “Whether they are productive, how large that cohort turns out to be, whether they find work or not, is going to have a bearing, I think, on all of us.” [Video Below]

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  • UN Further Refines Population Projections: 80 Percent Probability of 10-12 Billion People by 2100

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    October 16, 2014  //  By Elizabeth Leahy Madsen
    Johannesburg

    Seasoned demography geeks know to anticipate the release of the UN Population Division’s World Population Prospects in the spring of odd-numbered years. An off-cycle update published last month in Science, summarizing new results and methodological changes to the projections, therefore provoked a buzz of interest and a mini-flurry of media coverage.

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  • Andrew Revkin, Dot Earth

    On the Path Past 9 Billion, Little Crosstalk Between UN Sessions on Population and Global Warming

    ›
    September 22, 2014  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    china_construction

    The original version of this article, by Andrew Revkin, appeared on The New York Times’ Dot Earth blog.

    The United Nations and the streets of Manhattan are going into global warming saturation mode, from Sunday’s People’s Climate March through the Tuesday climate change summit convened by Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and on through an annual green-energy event called Climate Week.

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  • Global Youth Wellbeing Index Launched

    ›
    Eye On  //  September 15, 2014  //  By Heather Randall

    An estimated 1.8 billion people today are between the ages of 10 and 24 and 85 percent of them live in developing economies and/or fragile states. Such youthful age structures can lead to a number of challenges, including increased potential for instability, and countries with large numbers of young people must find ways to address their unique needs.

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