Blogs & Opinions


Disaster-Focused Headlines from the Congo Often Hide Signs of Progress

Jul 13, 2018 | Molly Bergen

In the Democratic Republic of Congo’s (DRC) northwestern city of Mbandaka, health workers spent recent months racing to contain the latest Ebola outbreak — including…


As Afghanistan’s Water Crisis Escalates, More Effective Water Governance Could Bolster Regional Stability

Jul 11, 2018 | Elizabeth B. Hessami

“Kabul be zar basha be barf ne!” This ancient proverb—“May Kabul be without gold rather than snow”—refers to snowmelt from the Hindu Kush Mountains, a…


Fanning the Flames – The Environmental Impact of Gaza’s Incendiary Kites

Jul 11, 2018 | Doug Weir

The 8th July marked 100 days since the first homemade incendiary kites were launched over Israel from Gaza. It also saw Israel promising punitive measures against…


A Pak-Afghan Water Treaty?

Jul 9, 2018 | Mashhood Hassan Azam Awan

The Indus River Basin is shared by four countries: Pakistan, India, Afghanistan and China. The water sector in this region faces certain challenges including the…


Open Mineral and ConsenSys Seek to Put the Blockchain in the Mineral Supply Chain

Jul 9, 2018 | Kyt Dotson

Open Mineral, an online metal and mineral exchange based in Switzerland, announced today the company’s upcoming launch of a distributed ledger blockchain platform to serve…


Trump Administration Threatens US Environmental Security

Jul 2, 2018 | Matthew King

Numerous articles have been written about how the Trump administration has been undermining federal regulatory agencies and their ability to ensure that Americans have access…


Confronting Afghanistan's Environmental Challenges

Jun 24, 2018 | Zia Nezam

Water scarcity, air and water pollution, deforestation, soil degradation, overgrazing, and desertification present daunting challenges, yet all can be ameliorated, as domestic and international development…


How Cheap Oil Hurts Sub-Saharan Africa

Jun 21, 2018 | Emily Meierding

Over the past four years, oil-producing countries have experienced a wild ride. After oil prices exceeded $110 per barrel for Brent crude in 2014, they…


Why Plenty of Food Means Plenty of Conflict

Jun 18, 2018 | Ore Koren

The notion that food scarcity increases the likelihood of conflict is not a recent one, although it has received increased attention over the past four…


Fuel to the Fire: Satellite Imagery Captures Burning Oil Tanks Libya

Jun 18, 2018 | Wim Zwijnenburg

Recent eruptions of violence in Libya’s so-called ‘oil crescent’ between armed forces loyal to Haftar’s Libyan National Army (LNA) and rival armed groups resulted in…


Land Rights: Liberia Is at a Crucial Moment in Its History

Jun 13, 2018 | Lennart Dodoo

A historic election gives President George Weah the momentum and mandate to enact a robust agenda, and Mr. Weah has rightly identified secure land rights…


Common Pool: Equitable Water Governance Brings Prosperity to Sabkhali

Jun 12, 2018

The Sundarbans, a vast forest in the coastal region of the Bay of Bengal, are considered one of the natural wonders of the world. Lying…


Not So Quiet on the Western Front: The Snowball Effect in Afghanistan

Jun 8, 2018 | Morwari Zafar

The deteriorating security in western Afghanistan may soon be worsened by a water crisis. A snowballing militancy, desiccating wetlands, and environmental migration create a trifecta…


Rubber Product Manufacturing in Liberia in Sight at Last

Jun 7, 2018 | Observer

Liberia, Africa’s first independent and sovereign Republic, has also been, since the early 1930s, the continent’s first rubber producing country, and yet in nearly 90…


Conflict in Abyei Could Reignite South Sudan’s Civil War

Jun 6, 2018 | Sam Mednick

Abyei, Sudan/South Sudan — Landlocked and lawless, the region of Abyei straddles Sudan and war-torn South Sudan’s borders, yet the arid expanse belongs to neither…


Environmental Peacebuilding: What Is it Good or?

Jun 5, 2018 | Nina Engwicht

Policy interventions seeking to break the link between natural resource abundance and violent conflict aim to tackle the quality of environmental governance both in producer…


Don't Turn to the Military to Solve the Climate-Change Crisis

Jun 5, 2018 | Nick Buxton

The Australian Senate’s declaration last month that climate change is a “current and existential national security risk” was clearly intended to inject much-needed urgency into the country’s…


Environmental Peacebuilding: An Introduction

Jun 3, 2018 | Vositha's Blog

Throughout history, natural resources have been the cause of many conflicts. While scarcity of resources such as water has been the cause of conflict among…


The Water Wars within: Preventing Subnational Water Conflicts

May 30, 2018 | Scott Moore

In 1995, World Bank official Ismail Serageldin warned that “the wars of the next century will be fought over water—unless we change our approach to…


The Imperative for Peace and Security Council’s Action against Conflict-Induced Food Insecurity

May 30, 2018 | Solomon Dersso

In the preamble to the Protocol of the Constitutive Act Relating to the Establishment of the Peace and Security Council (PSC) of the African Union…


Liberia: A Land of Wealth without Manager

May 30, 2018 | B.J. Goodlin

Liberia is a land filled with natural resources of wealth that hasn’t been managed shrewdly or should I put it to you that the lack…


Environmental Peacebuilding: What Is It Good for?

May 29, 2018 | Nina Engwicht

Policy interventions seeking to break the link between natural resource abundance and violent conflict aim to tackle the quality of environmental governance both in producer…


A Watershed Moment for Iraqi Kurdistan: Subnational Hydropolitics and Regional Stability

May 24, 2018 | Marcus King

Iraqi Kurdistan is blessed with abundant water resources, but these resources are under increasing stress. Changing demographics, dam building in neighboring countries, and drought have…


Editorial: Air Pollution a Major Health Risk

May 23, 2018 | Afghanistan Times

Air pollution in Kabul, the capital city maybe hastening to death of hundreds of people each year that have been required an urgent step to…


In Kabul, Residents Chase Receding Groundwater

May 20, 2018 | Kayla Ritter

Years of conflict coupled with an arid landscape have left residents of Kabul, Afghanistan, facing immense water shortages.

The capital city, which lies in the Kabul…


Climate Change is a Security Threat – So Where is the UN Security Council?

May 15, 2018 | Ashley Murphy

Climate change is one of the great security challenges of the 21st century. As the world warms, conflicts over water, food or energy will become…


Why Sierra Leone’s Mining Industry Requires a Robust Environmental Protection Regime

May 13, 2018 | Sonkita Conteh

As you enter Koidu town in the Kono District of eastern Sierra Leone an impressively large hill rises to the right of the newly constructed…


Why Blockchain Can Be an Effective Tool for Fighting Environmental Crime

May 10, 2018 | Samantha Radocchia

The effects of environmental crime and illicit trade are vast and often irreversible. For illustration, look no further than the recent death of the last…


New Global Analysis Finds Water-Related Terrorism Is on the Rise

May 10, 2018 | Jennifer Veilleux and Shlomi Dinar

In 2014, after losing a number of Somalian cities it had captured to African Union and Somali troops, the terrorist group Al-Shabaab changed its tactics.…


Mining Transparency in Myanmar: Can the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative Lead to a More Sustainable Democracy?

May 8, 2018 | Marjanneke Vijge

Myanmar is rich in natural resources—gas, oil, minerals, and gemstones—yet is still one of the world’s least developed countries. Extractive industries are the country’s most lucrative sector…