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China Environment Forum // Eye On
Inside ‘The Poachers Pipeline’: Q&A With Al Jazeera’s Jeremy Young and Kevin Hirten
Rhino horn is the most valuable illegally traded wildlife product in the world, more expensive per pound than either gold or cocaine and much more valuable than elephant ivory. With as few as 25,000 wild rhinos left in Africa, conservationist and law enforcement fight a constant battle with criminal syndicates seeking to kill rhinos and sell their horns to wealthy consumers abroad, many in Asia.
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Masculinity Under the Microscope: Better Accounting for Men in Climate Adaptation
December 13, 2016 // By Anam Ahmed“Before the famine my life was better. I was a man in my own country,” Abdi Abdullahi Hussein, a Somali refugee living in Kenya, tells The Climate Reality Project. “When you have livestock and a farm and it all disappears, it feels like falling off a cliff.”
Topics: adaptation, Africa, agriculture, Asia, climate change, development, environment, featured, food security, GBV, gender, HIV/AIDS, India, land, livelihoods, Mali, migration, mitigation, risk and resilience, Somalia, Tanzania, Vietnam -
From the Wilson Center
Navigating Complexity: Climate, Migration, and Conflict in a Changing World
Record levels of displacement and accelerating climate change have prompted many to wonder if the world is headed toward a more violent future. The nexus of climate change, migration, and conflict is posing fundamental challenges to societies. But not always in the ways you might think. In a new report prepared for the U.S. Agency of International Development, Lauren Herzer Risi and I present a small guide to this controversial and consequential nexus of global trends.
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From the Wilson Center
Human Rights and the Environment: How Do We Do Better?
2015 was a deadly year for environmental activism. According to Global Witness, 185 activists were killed, a 60 percent increase from 2014. Of the victims, 40 percent were indigenous people, like Berta Cáceres, who spoke at the Wilson Center last year and was shot and killed in her home in Honduras this March. [Video Below]
Topics: adaptation, Chad, climate change, community-based, conservation, demography, development, disaster relief, environment, environmental health, featured, From the Wilson Center, funding, gender, global health, human rights, international environmental governance, livelihoods, migration, mitigation, natural resources, poverty, risk and resilience, security, U.S., video, water, youth -
Friday Podcasts
Maxine Burkett on Why “Climate Refugees” Is Incorrect – and Why It Matters
More and more we are hearing stories about “climate refugees.” U.S. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell used the term to describe the Biloxi-Chitimacha-Choctaw tribe, a community which this year became the first to receive federal funding to relocate in its entirety from their sinking island home on the Louisiana coast.
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Feeding the Future? A Closer Look at U.S. Agricultural Assistance in Tanzania
May 11, 2016 // By Haodan "Heather" ChenBetween 2010 and 2015, Tanzania received more than $320 million in assistance via the U.S. government’s Feed the Future Initiative – the most of any country. But despite these commitments and an average of six to seven percent annual economic growth since 2000, Tanzania did not meet the first Millennium Development Goal: to reduce hunger and extreme poverty by half by the end of 2015.
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Guest Contributor
Breaking the Fragility Trap: What Role for the World Bank?
Last month, the World Bank’s Fragility Forum in Washington, DC, brought together some 600 participants to discuss how to advance sustainable development in the context of increasing conflicts and violence. World Bank President Jim Yong Kim opened the forum by emphasizing that we are at a critical moment.
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Guest Contributor
India’s Thirst for Palm Oil, New South-South Trade Patterns Cast Doubt on Sustainability Initiatives
Patterns of trade and consumption in the global food system are shifting. In the past, most trade in agricultural commodities occurred between developed and developing countries. But, in recent years, the volume of South-to-South trade has increased significantly. Today, some of the most problematic crops in terms of their effect on the environment, such as soy and palm oil, are predominantly traded amongst developing and fast-rising countries.