News
Women’s Crucial Role in Combating Climate Change
Apr 1, 2017
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Alina Tugend
The link between climate change and women’s rights may seem baffling to some.But for Zandile Gumede, the first female mayor of Durban, South Africa, they…
Call for Abstracts: International Conference on Water Security and Climate Change (WSCC) 2017
Mar 31, 2017
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Technology Arts Sciences TH Köln (and others)
Academics and practitioners from various sectors are set to discuss the diverse facets of water security in dynamic environments and its relation to climate variability…
Myanmar: A Chinese-backed Dam Project Leaves Myanmar in a Bind
Mar 31, 2017
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Mike Ives, New York Times
The Myitsone Dam is among the largest of many Chinese-financed energy and mining projects approved by the military junta that ruled Myanmar until 2011. It…
Myanmar: Waiting for Grid to Arrive, Myanmar Villages Switch on Solar
Mar 30, 2017
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Thin Lei Win, Thomson Reuters Foundation
Access to electricity from clean sources such as solar and small-scale hydropower is changing the centuries-old way of life in thousands of rural communities like…
Myanmar: Homegrown Clean Energy an Alternative to Myanmar’s Spotty Power Grid
Mar 30, 2017
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Erin Rubin, Nonprofit Quarterly
Necessity is the mother of invention, and in the case of rural Myanmar’s electricity generation, it’s also the mother of improvement. In rural areas where…
South Sudan: Conflict Now Eroding Food Security in 'Stable' Areas of South Sudan – UN Mission
Mar 30, 2017
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UN
The ongoing conflict in South Sudan is affecting food security in some of the country's more “stable” states, the head of United Nations peacekeeping operation…
State Department Ventures into Conflict Minerals
Mar 29, 2017
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Cydney S. Posner
Bloomberg BNA is reporting that the State Department has launched a new review of “how best to support responsible sourcing of conflict minerals,” which will continue…
Sierra Leone: The Protective Powers of Chocolate [Video]
Mar 29, 2017
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Ruth Krause and Björn Kietzmann, Deutsche Welle
Sierra Leone has lost 95 percent of its original forests. The vision of Gola Rainforest National Park, and the Greater Gola Landscape in which it…
Afghanistan: Resistance as Anti-Poppy Drive Proceeds in Nangarhar
Mar 29, 2017
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Pajhwok Afghan News
The counternarcotics department head for eastern Nangahar province says the ongoing anti-poppy campaign in the province has been struggling with security challenges. The department has…
Mexico: Oil Drillers Face an Angry Mob in Mexico’s Guerrilla Country
Mar 29, 2017
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Adam Williams, Bloomberg
When an angry mob torched City Hall in the southern Mexican town of Tecpatan last month, it sent a warning flare across a country already…
South Sudan: Oil Workers Seen as Target in New Phase of South Sudan's War
Mar 29, 2017
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Okech Francis and Nizar Manek, Bloomberg
Crude oil brings in the cash to keep South Sudan’s army fighting. That may have made oil workers a target for rebels waging the African…
Conflict Minerals: State Department Reviewing Conflict Minerals Sourcing
Mar 28, 2017
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Andrea Vittorio, Bureau of National Affairs
The State Department and other federal agencies are looking at efforts to break the link between armed groups and the minerals trade in and around…
Global Warming Is a Matter of Survival for Pacific Islander Women
Mar 28, 2017
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Kristi Eaton
For Viva Tatawaqa and women like her, climate change is not a question of when. According to the activist from Fiji, it's a question of…
Kidapawan, Climate Change and Conflict
Mar 27, 2017
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Laurence Delina
With another El Niño projected to form this year, one can wonder if policymakers have done proper analyses of the ways in which climate change…
Myanmar Must Avoid Resource Curse
Mar 27, 2017
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Chan Mya Htwe
It is high time that Myanmar escape from overdependence on natural resource income, analysts have said.
“In the long run, Myanmar must escape from resource dependency. …
Climate Change is a Security Threat
Mar 27, 2017
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Melanne Verveer
Climate change is a security threat and a vulnerability multiplier. It affects human security, food security, water security, energy security—and women’s security.
The security threat starts…
Myanmar: Timber Sector Wants MTE to Get the Chop
Mar 27, 2017
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Su Myat Mon, Frontier
The timber industry has called for an independent monitoring body to replace state-owned Myanma Timber Enterprise, which has been accused of hurting exports by failing…
Climate Security: Republicans Cite National Security to Justify Climate Action
Mar 27, 2017
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Sam Mintz and Hannah Hess, E&E News
Even though climate change can be politically toxic for many Republicans, linking the issue to national security and citing military leaders' acceptance of global warming…
South Sudan: Detention of Oil Workers in South Sudan Indicates Abduction Risks from Both Armed Factions and 'For-Profit' Bandits
Mar 27, 2017
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Verner Ayukegba, IHS Jane's Terrorism & Insurgency Centre
The faction of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement in Opposition (SPLM-IO) loyal to former South Sudanese first vice-president Riek Machar declared on 21 March that…
Food Security: Food Security in the Middle East Sharply Deteriorated
Mar 27, 2017
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Inter Press Service
Food security and nutrition levels in the Near East and North Africa have sharply deteriorated over the last five years, undermining the steady improvement achieved…
Conflict Minerals: Businesses Benefit from US Conflict Minerals Reporting Rule, Say NGOs
Mar 27, 2017
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Chemical Watch
NGOs have urged the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) not to weaken or repeal the US conflict minerals reporting rule, as doing so would have…
Colombia: Colombia’s Bananas ‘Not Stained with Blood’: Association
Mar 27, 2017
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Adriaan Alsema, Colombia Reports
Colombia’s banana companies financed legal “private security companies” and not paramilitary groups, claimed the association chairman as several members face charges of supporting terrorism. According…
To Defeat Terrorism In Afghanistan, Start With Opium Crops in Nangarhar Province
Mar 26, 2017
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Anders Corr
This month, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) claimed an attack on a military hospital in Kabul, killing more than 40 civilians and defenseless patients. The…
Iraq/Kurdistan: Frontier Too Far? Oil Producers Adjust to Reduced Hopes for Kurdistan
Mar 26, 2017
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Nathalie Thomas, Financial Times
Excited tales about how Kurdistan was one of the cheapest places on earth to pump crude grabbed the attention of big energy groups such as…
India: PMO Told that Water Wars Are Nearing in 'Water-Stressed' India
Mar 26, 2017
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Yatish Yadav, New Indian Express
With demand outstripping supply of water, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) is waking up to the possibility of water scarcity triggering social unrest in the…
Keeping Myanmar's Lights On
Mar 25, 2017
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Tony Nash
Myanmar is one of the world's fastest growing economies, with projected annual growth of 7.8% in gross domestic product for the financial year to March…
Sierra Leone: Miners Found a 706-Carat Diamond in Sierra Leone. Who Should Get the Profit?
Mar 25, 2017
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Jaime Yaya Barry, New York Times
Fist-size and lumpy, the rock that a team of miners came upon recently in the diamond fields of Sierra Leone was orange with red speckles…
Afghanistan: Afghanistan’s Relentless Opium Woes Have a 'New Seed in Town,' and It Comes from China
Mar 25, 2017
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Mariam Amini, CNBC
A problem that Afghanistan and international governments have tried to eradicate for decades is only getting worse, and China is a big reason why. Last…
Ken Conca on the Good, Bad, and Ugly of Water Conflict and Cooperation
Mar 24, 2017
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Lauren Herzer Risi
In international development, conflict is often used as shorthand for violent conflict, and avoiding conflict is considered a priority. But “it’s important to recognize that…
Why Our Human Rights Depend on Turning Conflict into Conservation
Mar 24, 2017
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Alex Reid
Biodiversity hotspots cover just 1.4% of the planet’s surface, yet 80% of major armed conflicts between 1950 and 2000 occurred in these areas. This figure should…