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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category urbanization.
  • World Water Day: A Wellspring for Sustainable Development

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    March 20, 2015  //  By Schuyler Null & Linnea Bennett
    Katse-Dam1

    This year’s World Water Day is taking on a broader theme than years past: sustainable development. The theme makes sense as two major international processes – the drafting of the Sustainable Development Goals to replace the Millennium Development Goals, and the most anticipated UN Climate Summit in years – are taking place in 2015. Decisions made over the next nine months will play a huge role in relationships between nations and global development priorities going forward.

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  • World Economic Forum Evaluates Global Risks, Comes to Some Odd Conclusions

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    Eye On  //  March 12, 2015  //  By Linnea Bennett

    With intense drought in Sao Paulo and California, devastating floods in Malawi, and escalating water-energy confrontations in many developing countries, it is no wonder water is making headlines. It’s also gained the attention of the World Economic Forum (WEF), which lists water crises as the world’s number one risk in its recently released Global Risk Assessment.

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  • Call for Papers: 2015 Graduate Student Paper Competition on Reducing Urban Poverty

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    Urban Sustainability Laboratory  //  March 11, 2015  //  By Allison Garland
    dhaka

    To encourage a new generation of urban policymakers and promote early career research, the Wilson Center’s Urban Sustainability Laboratory is teaming with USAID, the International Housing Coalition, World Bank, and Cities Alliance to sponsor the 6th Annual Urban Poverty Paper Competition for students enrolled in a Master’s or PhD program working on topics relating to urban poverty in the developing world.

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  • The Future of Political Demography and Its Impact on Policy

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    March 9, 2015  //  By Schuyler Null
    revolution2

    “Political demography is a discipline whose time has come,” said Rob Odell of the National Intelligence Council at a gathering of demographers and researchers in New Orleans. “You can sense this inherent dissatisfaction” with a lot of analytical and predictive tools in international relations, he said, and “political demography provides policymakers a way to think about long-term trends.”

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  • India’s Growing Water Risks, Illustrated

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    Guest Contributor  //  March 3, 2015  //  By Tien Shiao, Andrew Maddocks, Christopher Carson & Emma Loizeaux
    India-water-farming

    India is one of the most water-challenged countries in the world, from its deepest aquifers to its largest rivers. Groundwater levels are falling as farmers, new urban residents, and industries drain wells and aquifers. What water is available is often severely polluted, and the future may only be worse, with the national supply predicted to fall 50 percent below demand by 2030.

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  • In Food Riots, Researchers Find a Divide Between Democracies and Autocracies

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 24, 2015  //  By Cullen Hendrix
    riot-police

    Though the bull market for metals and energy may be ending, global food prices remain stubbornly high. The inflation-adjusted FAO Food Price Index is down from the near historic heights of 2007-08 and 2011 but still higher than at any point in the previous 30 years, putting a brake on several decades of progress in reducing world hunger.

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  • Eric Chu on Translating Climate Adaptation Theory to Action on the Local Level

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    Friday Podcasts  //  February 13, 2015  //  By Sarah Meyerhoff
    Eric-Chu

    “Adaptation is very theoretical. When you talk about ‘resilience,’ you draw these Venn diagrams and you draw these really complex issues, but at least at the IPCC level, we didn’t spend a lot of time thinking about what people were actually doing,” says Eric Chu in this week’s podcast.

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  • Are We Keeping up With Asia’s Urbanization?

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 2, 2015  //  By Steven Gale
    Victoria-Peak

    There is widespread agreement, and untold publications, that argue urbanization is the defining issue of our time. There are more cities, both large and small, and more people living in those cities than anytime in human history.

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