Blogs & Opinions


Hazardous Legacies: An Open-Source Overview of the Destruction of Deir ez-Zor’s Oil Industry

Oct 20, 2017 | Wim Zwijnenburg

Now that the so-called Islamic State (IS) is rapidly losing terrain in eastern Syria, a race is underway to capture the oil-rich Deir ez-Zor governorate.…


The Environmental Consequences of the Use of Armed Drones

Oct 20, 2017 | Doug Weir

To date, debate over the implications of the growing use of armed drones has focused on human rights, on the expansion of the use of…


Who is Behind the Recent Rise of Genetically Modified Poppy in Afghanistan?

Oct 20, 2017 | Irfan Takalvi

During the past two to two and half decades Afghanistan, under various regimes that controlled parts of the country, poppy has globally been highlighted as…


Colombia’s Frontlines of the Drug War: Cauca

Oct 20, 2017 | Adriaan Alsema

Colombian authorities are combating cocaine production in some of the most remote regions. Cauca is one of the long-neglected areas where the drug trade has fueled political…


Climate Change, Food Security and Sustaining Peace

Oct 18, 2017 | Florian Krampe

‘We have succeeded at keeping famine at bay, we have not kept suffering at bay’, said UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres while briefing members of the…


Myanmar’s Evolving Maritime Security Landscape

Oct 18, 2017 | Rajni Gamage

Myanmar links South and Southeast Asia and lies on maritime shipping routes from the Indian and Pacific Oceans. A key pillar of its national development…


The Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons: Assisting Victims and Remediating the Environment

Oct 17, 2017 | Elizabeth Minor

In a remarkable achievement this summer, States concluded negotiations on the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW). Having opened for signature in September, the TPNW…


Could Oil Bring the World to Finally Support the Kurds?

Oct 17, 2017 | Ellen R. Wald

One month after the KRG voted in favor of a referendum to seek independence from Iraq, Baghdad finally responded. In the early morning hours of…


On Trump, Afghanistan, and the Plunder Doctrine

Oct 16, 2017 | Kate Harveston

Plunder. It’s a word typically reserved for the likes of pirates, but it seems somehow appropriate when used next to the name Donald Trump. Perhaps…


NATO and Climate Change: The Need for a More Coherent Approach

Oct 16, 2017 | Amar Causevic

Climate change represents a non-traditional threat to international security and the future existence of modern civilization. Year after year, drought, fam­ine, storms and flooding become…


Indigenous Resistance: My Fight for Land and Life in Colombia

Oct 16, 2017 | Angelica Ortiz

My name is Angelica Ortiz. I am a Wayuu woman from the Ipuana clan of the Lomomato indigenous reserve in La Guajira, Colombia. I am…


Climate Change Did Not Cause Syrian War

Oct 16, 2017 | Tim Radford

LONDON, 11 October, 2017 – Climate change in the form of sustained drought is not to blame for the bloody and prolonged conflict in Syria, according to a…


ISIL's Scorched Earth Policy in Iraq: Options for its Victims to be Recognized under International Law

Oct 13, 2017 | Doug Weir

With what has been called a ‘landmark’ resolution, the UN Security Council has established a team to investigate international crimes committed by ISIL in Iraq.…


Gender in Conflicts - Interview with Saferworld on Building Peace [Video]

Oct 6, 2017 | Climate Diplomacy

Saferworld is an international conflict prevention organization. The Head of Policy, Larry Attree, in this video, shares the lessons learned over the years to end…


Unraveling the Oil Geopolitics Intertwined in the Kurdish Independence Referendum

Oct 6, 2017 | Amy Myers Jaffe

For over a decade, U.S. efforts to promote stability across the Middle East have run afoul of many complexities. The recent independence referendum in the…


Overlooked and Misunderstood: Stories about Climate, Conflict, and Migration

Oct 6, 2017 | Bethany N. Bella

Barbuda—an island once full of people—has been rendered completely uninhabitable by Hurricane Irma. Every single resident was evacuated from the island, and some are not planning to return.…


Peace Consciousness and Food Security

Oct 6, 2017 | Louie Divinagracia

As the country celebrates national peace consciousness month, we are reminded about the role of peace in food security. Sometime last year, the Food and…


China’s Water Grab in Tibet Risks Regional Devastation and Conflict

Oct 6, 2017 | Nithin Coca

China’s unchecked mining expansion and dam construction across the Tibetan plateau, compounded by climate change melting glaciers, are threatening the Yellow, Yangtze, Ganges and other…


The Arctic: In the Face of Change, an Ocean of Cooperation

Oct 6, 2017 | Wilson Center Staff

“The United States and Russia… have found ways to continue to cooperate in the Arctic—particularly, but not only—through the Arctic Council, despite the difficulties on other issues relating…


Kurdish Independence: It’s All About the Oil

Oct 5, 2017 | Amy Myers Jaffe

For over a decade, U.S. efforts to promote stability across the Middle East have run afoul of many complexities. The recent independence referendum in the…


Cordaid Confronts the Challenges of Conflict and Climate Change

Oct 2, 2017 | Marcelin Ridja

Cordaid’s technical teams (Food Security, Water, and Sanitation, Community Mobilization and Protection) are working together in order to provide assistance to the displaced populations who…


Everyone Wants Cobalt, but Few Want to Get Tangled up in the World’s Largest Producing Nation

Oct 2, 2017 | Lynsey Chutel

For too long, the Democratic Republic of Congo has known no competition in the cobalt market, to its detriment. The metal, which used to be…


The FARC, Land Reform, and the Future of Colombia’s Security

Oct 1, 2017 | Nicola Bilotta

The historical ceasefire, signed in La Habana on June 23th 2016, was the first step to bring peace in Colombia after fifty-two years of conflict.…


All in a Generation: Stopping Conflict, Building Peace, and Saving the Environment

Oct 1, 2017 | Anuj Krishnamurthy

Today, world leaders gathered in New York for the United Nations General Assembly will celebrate the International Day of Peace, observed annually since 1981. This year’s…


The Struggle for Kurdistan’s Oil: Past, Present and Future

Sep 27, 2017 | Leo Kabouche

On Monday, September 25, the government of Iraqi Kurdistan held an independence referendum. Although the vote will not trigger any immediate change to the nature…


How Oil Wealth and Terrorism Can Lead to Kurdistan’s Secession

Sep 27, 2017 | Mirna Khaled Abdulaal

State building is a difficult and expensive task, and in a region currently gripped by perpetual conflict, the possibilities of creating a new state come…


All in a Generation: Stopping Conflict, Building Peace, and Saving the Environment

Sep 24, 2017 | Anuj Krishnamurthy

Today, world leaders gathered in New York for the United Nations General Assembly will celebrate the International Day of Peace, observed annually since 1981. This year’s…


Peace and the Environment

Sep 24, 2017 | Janet Edmond

Today is International Peace Day and my mind is filled with thoughts of the many conflicts over natural resources around the world, many in critically…


The Assault on the Rohingya Is Not Only about Religion — It’s Also about Land

Sep 24, 2017 | Saskia Sassen

Religion and ethnicity have been the major focus in local and international news coverage of the persecution of the Rohingya in Myanmar. Such persecution is…


Can Renewable Energy Pay a Peace Dividend?

Sep 24, 2017 | Justin Guay

What if the hundreds of millions of dollars spent each and every year burning fossil fuels to power peacekeeping and humanitarian efforts could instead create…