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Watch: Dennis Taenzler on Four Key Steps for REDD+ to Avoid Becoming a Source of Conflict
›The UN Program on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) provides financial incentives to developing countries to conserve their forests and invest in low-carbon pathways to sustainable development. However, it may also be a potential new source of conflict, says Dennis Taenzler, a senior project manager at adelphi in Berlin, who works on climate and energy policies as well as peace and conflict issues.
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El Niño, Conflict, and Environmental Determinism: Assessing Climate’s Links to Instability
›October 5, 2011 // By Schuyler NullA recent Nature article on climate’s impact on conflict has generated controversy in the environmental security community for its bold conclusions about links between the global El Niño/La Niña cycle and the probability of intrastate conflict.
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Top 10 Posts for September 2011
›Two Pop Audio interviews – from Rich Thorstein and Karen Seto – joined the top 10 last month (measured by unique pageviews), as well as the launch of Brahma Chellaney’s new book, Water: Asia’s New Battleground, a look at “land grabs” in the context of water access, a crosspost from Edward Carr on food security maps, and Shannon Beebe’s event from last year on his book, The Ultimate Weapon Is No Weapon.
1. Tunisia’s Shot at Democracy: What Demographics and Recent History Tell Us
2. Rich Thorsten on Water Sanitation, Population, and Urbanization in the Developing World
3. In Search of a New Security Narrative: The National Conversation at the Wilson Center
4. India’s Maoists: South Asia’s “Other” Insurgency
5. Guest Contributor Jim Duncan: Redrawing the Map of the World’s International River Basins
6. In the Rush for Land, Is it All About the Water?
7. Karen Seto on the Environmental Impact of Expanding Cities [Part One]
8. Food Security and Conflict Done Badly…, via Edward Carr, Open the Echo Chamber
9. Water: Asia’s New Battleground
10. The Ultimate Weapon Is No Weapon: Human Security and the New Rules of War and Peace -
Weathering Change: New Film Links Climate Adaptation and Family Planning
›“Our planet is changing. Our population is growing. Each one of us is impacting the environment…but not equally. Each one of us will be affected…but not equally,” asserts the new documentary, Weathering Change, launched at the Wilson Center on September 22. The film, produced by Population Action International (PAI), explores the devastating impacts of climate change on the lives of women in developing countries through personal stories from Ethiopia, Nepal, and Peru. Family planning, argue the filmmakers, is part of the solution.
Monthly archive for October 2011. Show all posts