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Claire Doyle

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Articles

  • Nov 25, 2024 | newsecuritybeat.org | Claire Doyle

    “I think we need to approach climate security completely differently,” said Sharon Burke, Founder and President of Ecospherics and Wilson Center Global Fellow , at the recent 2024 Montreal Climate Security Conference. “It’s not just that climate change is an opportunity cost in combat power, or that it’s effecting our bases and operating environment, or that it is an accelerant to instability.

  • Aug 28, 2024 | wilsoncenter.org | Sarah Barnes |Claire Doyle |Deekshita Ramanarayanan

    ClimateReproductive HealthGender EqualityA warming world is leading to new challenges for communities and countries around the globe. The significant impacts of climate change on global health, and on women and girls, are well-documented. Yet despite the evidence, funding for climate responses that focus on health or gender remains relatively low.

  • Jul 26, 2024 | newsecuritybeat.org | Claire Doyle

    In this episode of New Security Broadcast, ECSP’s Claire Doyle speaks with Carl Bruch, Senior Attorney and Director of International Programs at the Environmental Law Institute and the founding President of the Environmental Peacebuilding Association. Bruch is a recognized expert on environmental governance and environmental peacebuilding around the world, having worked to provide legal assistance and capacity building in dozens of countries throughout the Americas, Asia, Africa, and Europe.

  • May 10, 2024 | newsecuritybeat.org | Claire Doyle

    In today’s episode of New Security Broadcast, ECSP’s Claire Doyle speaks with Dr. Dhanasree Jayaram, Program Manager at Climate Diplomacy and Assistant Professor at the Manipal Academy of Higher Education in India. Dr. Jayaram describes what environmental peacebuilding looks like in the context of South Asia, how climate diplomacy connects to environmental peacebuilding, and how the field has evolved.

  • Oct 23, 2023 | newsecuritybeat.org | Claire Doyle

    The global transition to low-carbon energy is spurring new momentum to produce and secure the mineral inputs necessary for renewable technologies. Yet meeting demand may prove difficult. From electric cars to wind turbines, essential renewable energy technologies often require more minerals than fossil fuel-powered infrastructure. The International Energy Agency (IEA) projects that efforts to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement could lead to a fourfold increase in mineral demand by 2040.

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