Blogs & Opinions
Conflict in Yemen: Lessons for Citizen Environmental Monitoring
May 15, 2015
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Andy Garrity
The conflict in Yemen is likely to have produced a range of TRW threats for the civilian population but in common with other conflicts, data…
41 Years in the Making: Why China's South China Sea Plan Will Fail
May 8, 2015
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Leszek Buszynski
While China’s recent assertiveness in the South China Sea might shock and surprise today’s observers, its behavior has actually been remarkably consistent over recent decades.
China…
Fragile States Use Geospatial Data and Maps to Better Manage Natural Resources
May 6, 2015
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Alex Fischer
The g7+ countries (a voluntary grouping of 20 states affected by fragility) have recognized that one of the first step towards addressing the challenges identified in natural…
Oil, Gold, Etc., Invite Investors, and Yes, Corruption & Inequality
May 5, 2015
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J. Yanqui Zaza
Diamonds, gold, etc., resources needed for prosperity, are in abundance in Liberia, specifically, and in general, in Africa. Investors, invited or not, are in every…
Conservation for Peace: Perspectives of Environmental Peacebuilders in Liberia and Timor-Leste
May 1, 2015
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Brittany Ajroud and Janet Edmond
Environmental peacebuilding is an emerging field of practice that responds to the needs of the many remote, biodiverse communities around the world that struggle to prevent…
Amid Katmandu's Earthquake Wreckage, Hints of a Shift to Safer Construction
May 1, 2015
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Andrew C. Revkin
In the world’s crowded earthquake zones, fromthe Himalayas to the Pacific Northwest, every community faces enormous challenges in designing for inevitable, but unpredictable jolts. This challenge is particularly…
Is the Rubber Industry Dragging Its Heels on Sustainability?
May 1, 2015
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Megan Macinnes
Our recent Guns, Cronies and Crops exposé revealed the human toll of the rubber industry in Myanmar, where companies colluded with the former military junta to seize vast…
Environmental Peacebuilding in the South China Sea
May 1, 2015
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Ryan Stoa
In recent years the South China Sea has become a fiercely contested region. China's rise as a regional and global superpower has emboldened an aggressive…
The Limits of the “Nile Agreement”
Apr 29, 2015
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Mwangi S. Kimenyi and John Mukum Mbaku
On Monday, March 23, 2015, leaders of Egypt, Ethiopia, and Sudan met in the Sudanese capital Khartoum to sign an agreement that is expected to resolve various…
Wicked Problems, Messy Analysis, Clumsy Solutions?
Apr 28, 2015
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Naho Mirumachi
Increased climate uncertainty, changing lifestyles and disparities in socio-economic development make finding solutions to water scarcity and water-related hazards significant. Today, there are both persistent…
Building Climate Resilience in Conflict-Affected States: A Neglected Agenda
Apr 27, 2015
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Grace Keyes
Climate change adaptation and mitigation efforts face many obstacles in fragile and conflict-affected societies. Instead of writing off these situations, however, International Alert’s Janani Vivekananda,…
War, Famine, and Drought – the Unholy Trinity Changing Our World
Apr 27, 2015
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Boyd Tonkin
Earlier this week, the outgoing Deputy Prime Minister at last backtracked on his government’s part in the withdrawal last year of EU search-and-rescue operations for…
Violence and Conflict over Minerals Still Plague Eastern Congo
Apr 23, 2015
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Sarah Morrison
For Darlène Ndango, fear builds at night. Just over two weeks ago, she was woken up in her bed by the sound of gunshots ripping…
Tracing the Source of ‘Conflict Minerals’
Apr 22, 2015
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Denis Mukwege
BUKAVU, Democratic Republic of Congo — From 1998 through 2002, my country, the Democratic Republic of Congo, endured a devastating civil war. The cease-fire that…
The Ukraine Conflict’s Legacy of Environmental Damage and Pollutants
Apr 22, 2015
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Nickolai Denisov, Otto Simonett, Doug Weir and Dmytro Averin
One year after violent conflict began, information is now emerging on the specific environmental impact of war in Ukraine’s highly industrialised Donbas region. Although obtaining…
The Coming Water Wars
Apr 20, 2015
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Jo Ankier and John Fengolio
“Around 60% more food will be needed to feed the world’s growing population by 2050 and with the demand for water set to increase by…
New Photo Shows China's First Airfield in the World's Most Contested Archipelago
Apr 17, 2015
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Ishaan Tharoor
The image, provided by IHS Jane's Defense Weekly, shows that China has begun building a runway on an island in the disputed Spratly Islands in the…
Catalyzing Cooperation: Disaster Diplomacy and its Potential to Short-Circuit the Climate-Conflict Link
Apr 15, 2015
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Tim Kovach
Here is a growing chorus of voices claiming climate change will foster more conflict and violence. Books have been released on the impending age of climate…
President Obama’s Visit to Jamaica: Doubling down on Climate Security Collaboration
Apr 9, 2015
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Oliver-Leighton Barrett
President Obama is making a short but historic trip to Kingston, Jamaica, on the eve of the Summit of the Americas to be held in…
Science and Geopolitics Converging in the Troubled Waters of the South China Sea
Apr 8, 2015
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James Borton
The South China Sea remains at the epicenter of one of the most volatile maritime areas in the world, with little or no agreement on…
Collapse War in the Middle East?
Apr 7, 2015
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Jean-Michel Valantin
The current war raging throughout Syria and Iraq is profoundly singular, because it combines itself with the social and environmental collapse, combined with the severe…
Sand Pebbles: Why are Superpowers Squabbling over Rocks?
Apr 2, 2015
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Keith Johnson
China’s aggressive behavior in the South China Sea is alarming the Navy and prompting calls for a more vigorous U.S. response. Over the past year,…
Baghdad Scores a Goal in its Oil Dispute with Kurdistan
Apr 2, 2015
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David Romano
Last September, the federal government in Baghdad filed a $300 million lawsuit against the Kurdistan Regional Government’s (KRG) most important oil tanker shipping partner, Greece’s…
Unplanned Plans!
Apr 1, 2015
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Kashmir Images
In 1961, diamond-rich Botswana and Sierra Leone had approximately the same per capita income of about US$1,070, however, both these countries in Africa adopted and…
Free Speech Inc.
Mar 30, 2015
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Cass R. Sunstein
The most illuminating free-speech case of 2015 has nothing to do with political speech, or civil-rights protests, or hate speech, or any other issues we used…
Linking Water Security With National Security
Mar 30, 2015
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Muhammad Zamir
Everyone needs to be worried about water security, pollution and the environment. We need to accord these factors the priority that they deserve.
As we observed…
The Civilian Health Risks from TNT in Syria’s Barrel Bombs
Mar 27, 2015
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Doug Weir
The TRWP was recently asked to help identify a substance associated with partially detonated barrel bombs in Syria. Syria’s White Helmets, the volunteers who daily…
From Food Security to Regional Security: How Community Resilience Can Prevent Conflict in Africa
Mar 26, 2015
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Darius Mans
If we're going to prevent people from being susceptible to the false promises of extremism, then the international community has to offer something better... We…
Don't Torpedo The Dam, Full Speed Ahead For Ethiopia's Nile Project
Mar 26, 2015
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Gregory Warner
The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam is under construction near Assosa, Ethiopia. When it's completed, the dam will have be able to produce 6,000 megawatts of…
Women On the Frontlines of Water Insecurity
Mar 25, 2015
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Mayesha Alam
Water is essential to life on earth, but we are facing a global crisis. According to a new report released by UNESCO on March 22…