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Top 10 Posts for January 2014
›There are lots of questions for 2014. After another round of devastating natural disasters, is this the year we pin down a definition of the much-ballyhooed concept of resilience? What about “women’s empowerment?” In Africa, will there be signs of accelerating demographic transitions? Will China solve its water-energy choke point? And can other countries too balance natural resource extraction and climate change adaptation with equitable development?
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Geoff Dabelko: Face Down the “Four Tyrannies” to Improve Cross-Sectoral Collaboration
›What does Himalayan ice melt have to do with food security in Cambodia? A lot, when they both significantly affect the flow of the Mekong River. But when it comes to long-term planning across topical and regional lines, development agencies aren’t always as collaborative as they could be – both externally and internally.
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Lisa Dabek: Thinking Long Term to Save Papua New Guinea’s Tree Kangaroos
›“I always say what brought me to Papua New Guinea is the tree kangaroo, and what keeps me there are the people,” said Lisa Dabek.
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Top 10 Posts for 2013
›In what’s becoming a trend, another set of devastating natural disasters made headlines in 2013. Typhoon Haiyan enveloped the Philippines in November while the world watched online, and less publicized but just as traumatic, flash flooding in India this summer killed thousands of pilgrims making their way up Himalayan river valleys.
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Top 10 Posts for November 2013
›Rates of species extinction are so high that some scientists have categorized the current era as Earth’s sixth mass extinction event. In last month’s most popular post, Kathleen Mogelgaard explains that a new study indicates, of all the human factors related to this biodiversity loss, population growth and density may be the strongest. Popular new additions also include a review of former Wilson Center Fellow Jeff Colgan’s Petro-Aggression; the launch of research on urbanization, demography, and climate change adaptation; the UN Foundation’s Alaka Basu on Friday Podcasts talking about re-thinking women’s empowerment; and a brief from the China Environment Forum on China’s distant water fishing fleets.
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Population-Environment Program Wins Recognition: Blue Ventures Honored at International Conference on Family Planning
›This year’s International Conference on Family Planning (ICFP) happened to coincide with the UN’s annual climate change summit. Perhaps it’s apt then that one of the organizations recognized for excellence is helping to bridge the gap between the environment and family planning communities.
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Top 10 Posts for October 2013
›“We are coming up with solutions. That’s the story here – the resilience, not the vulnerability,” Saleemul Huq told us last month. Jacob Glass’s interview with Huq – later transcribed in full – was part of a look at Bangladesh’s budding aquaculture sector and one of the most popular new articles last month. Joining it were other newcomers, on storytelling and influencing policy; the annual Society of Environmental Journalists conference; Africa’s nexus of demography, environment, and security challenges; and 10 recommendations for the population, health, and environment (PHE) community from the BALANCED Project, as they finish five years of global programming.
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Top 10 Posts for September 2013
›Environmental security and population dynamics dominated September’s most popular stories. New guest posts on peacebuilding and natural resources in Afghanistan and climate change and conflict accompanied the launch of the latest issue of ECSP Report 14, on food security. Meanwhile, Elizabeth Leahy Madsen’s posts on aging and the second demographic dividend, growth in sub-Saharan Africa, and the latest UN updates to world population projections continued strong.
Showing posts by Schuyler Null.