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Development Aid Cuts Will Hit Fragile Countries Hard, Could Fuel Violent Conflict. In countries that rely heavily on foreign assistance, development funding should be allocated to correspond more closely with peacebuilding.UNU Patricia JustinoLaura Saavedra-Lux 1 Dec 2023 Fragile and least developed countries have had their development assistance cut drastically, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. For instance, net official development assistance to sub-Saharan African countries has shrunk by 7.8% compared to 2021. And development aid for peace and conflict prevention has declined to its lowest in 15 years. These cuts will hit fragile countries hard. Fragile countries make up 24% of the world’s population and account for 73% of the world’s extreme poor. The list includes Mali, Lebanon, Somalia, Syria and Iraq.. Budget cuts are already having far-reaching effects and fuelling humanitarian crises. The World Food Programme estimates that “every one percent cut in food assistance risks pushing more than 400,000 people towards the brink of starvation”. UN Secretary-General António Guterres has warned that aid cuts threaten to undo gains in development. Keeping in mind that poverty has increased in conflict-affected countries despite a global downward trend, we anticipate that such a reversal could contribute to global instability. Violent conflict has already been on the rise among countries that rely heavily on foreign financial assistance. Decades of research (including ours) show that marginalized populations are most vulnerable to be (re-)mobilized into fighting and are typically also most affected by armed conflict (even after violence ends).
It is true that political and societal contexts matter and need to be taken into account. But the reduction in aid allocation to least developed countries and especially those recovering from violent conflict could put fragile countries on a trajectory of (renewed) political instability and underdevelopment. Already vulnerable populations will have to yet again carry the brunt of new cycles of violence and impoverishment. We have been researching links between development and violent conflict for decades and close to a decade, respectively. Our latest research project is on the institutional legacies of violent conflict. It shows how and why violent conflicts persist, how and why their legacies endure, and what can be done to reduce the risk and impact of violence. We recommend that development aid needs to correspond more closely with mounting peacebuilding and humanitarian needs in fragile settings.
The impact......Not all development aid is effective in bringing stability or building peace. Nevertheless, based on our analysis, development aid plays a crucial role in six key areas. Firstly, development aid is effective when linked to the delivery of public services. These in turn strengthen the social contract and mitigate the risk of violence. Secondly.......financial assistance can help governments absorb the effects of economic shocks. Economies across the Global South are already stifled by the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, climate risks and the economic consequences of the war in Ukraine. Fragile countries often rely on assistance to meet some of their population’s most basic needs such as food or water. Without additional financial assistance, many governments will not be able to manage their way through these shocks. That may embolden violent non-state actors to gain power.Two examples stand out. In West Africa violent non-state actors operating in the Sahel region are set to expand their influence into new areas considered stable thus far, such as the north of Côte d’Ivoire. Similarly, the current Israel-Palestine conflict risks spreading instability into neighbouring countries amid longstanding tensions and economic fragility.
Thirdly........cuts in development aid may reduce the limited leverage Western countries still have to prevent the rise of opportunistic armed groups such as the Wagner Group, the spread of extremism and the risk of civil conflicts.The Sahel region is also emblematic of this dynamic. Mali and Burkina Faso have seen the deadliest year on record as their military transitional governments struggle to contain jihadist insurgencies. Since the recent military coup in Niger, which prompted withdrawal of both aid and international troops, the country has also experienced a surge in militant violence. Fourth....... worsening economic and security conditions in fragile and least developed countries are already reverberating into Europe. There have been spikes in irregular border crossings into European Union countries in 2023. Fifth...... rising discrepancy in development aid allocation could amplify mistrust in international institutions and western actors. That could contribute to worsening security situations. Some governments in fragile countries are already reluctant to continue to engage with the UN and especially Western actors to combat violent non-state actors. An example of this is the Democratic Republic of Congo’s (DRC) recent request to the UN for an “accelerated” withdrawal of troops. It comes 24 years after the start of MONUSCO, the UN’s peacekeeping mission in DRC, one of the largest in the world. Violence may increase in the absence of such international intervention, as has happened since the withdrawal of MINSUSMA, the UN mission that was in Mali for ten years. Sixth.......the reduction in aid allocation to least developed countries and especially those recovering from violent conflict could result in continued political instability and underdevelopment.
Next steps......Development funding should be allocated in a way that corresponds more closely with peacebuilding and humanitarian needs. This is also made clear in the UN’s New Agenda for Peace.......and yet the developed countries do not act in any significant way....read on https://unu.edu/article/development-aid-cuts-will-hit-fragile-countries-hard-could-fuel-violent-conflict
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Climate disasters—including floods and extreme heat—have killed thousands in Pakistan in the last several years. This year, temperatures of more than 120 degrees Fahrenheit came early and threaten to break spring heat records. By the government’s own estimation, more than 95 percent of all deaths in Pakistan go unregistered. This means that the already severe, documented impacts of climate change are likely just scratching the surface of the true scale of harm.“It’s really important [to understand] how little we see of the real impacts of the climate crisis in Pakistan,” said Laura Mills, a crisis response researcher at Amnesty International and one of the report’s authors. “We’re only seeing part of the story.”
Rising floods and extreme heat in Pakistan are straining an already under-resourced health care system, with elders and children most vulnerable to growing dangers of disease and death, the report says......read on https://insideclimatenews.org/
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What’s behind the e-commerce boom, and what makes NYC unique for deliveries? Though e-commerce has been taking off over the past decade, the COVID-19 pandemic really made it an indispensable facet of many people’s lives. As we have seen with food deliveries, people’s penchant for ordering things online instead of going to the store has not waned with the end of pandemic restrictions. It turns out that, according to this map from the Mayor’s Office for Environmental Justice, I live right next to a last-mile facility. New York City is unique for these deliveries because, due to the incredibly high price tag on retail space, many businesses have little to no storage space for their inventory. This increases the number of trucks on the road already because they must deliver to these places much more often.Then, when you take the fact that the city is so densely populated and 80 percent of households are getting a package delivered weekly, the amount of trucks coming in and out of these last-mile facilities is very high. And because they can only be sited in industrial or commercial districts, which number around two dozen in the city, communities near these districts suffer disproportionately.
The Online Shopping Boom Comes at a Price—and Some New Yorkers Pay More Than Their Fair Share. More diesel trucks are on the streets, and their destinations are often warehouses located in historically disadvantaged areas. Inside Climate NewsLauren Dalban March 30, 2025 Package deliveries in New York City are booming, bolstered by the pandemic and online shopping, with 80 percent of households in New York City receiving a package a week, according to the Office of the Mayor. Almost 90 percent of goods are transported into or around the city by trucks, which emit fine particulate matter, also known as PM2.5, and nitrogen oxides, which can help form PM2.5. Many of them are older, heavy-duty diesel vehicles, which contribute a substantial amount of PM2.5 pollution in urban areas. Fine particulate matter is among the most harmful pollutants, with health impacts like childhood asthma, cancer, cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, and premature mortality. According to city data, long-term exposure to the pollutant contributes to an estimated 2,000 excess deaths a year, or 1 in 25 deaths, in the city. Around 14 percent of PM2.5 pollution in the city comes from traffic, and this pollution is far from evenly distributed. The poorest neighborhoods often suffer the most in this equation—the PM2.5 levels from traffic are often higher in high-poverty neighborhoods, as well as the number of hospitalizations related to this pollutant.
To facilitate the explosion of e-commerce, more and more facilities called last-mile warehouses are going up in neighborhoods already overburdened by air pollution from traffic. These facilities take in goods from trucks coming in from across the country and sort them before they are transported to their final destination, which is usually not too far—often the “last mile” on their journey. Today, these warehouses can be constructed without the need for a permit or environmental review in eight commercial or manufacturing districts. As a result, they are clustered in neighborhoods around Newtown Creek, a small canal that separates Queens and Brooklyn, as well as Sunset Park and Red Hook in Brooklyn and Hunts Point in the Bronx. These neighborhoods are, or encompass, environmental justice areas—places that have experienced a disproportionate amount of negative impacts from environmental issues due to historical disinvestment and social inequities. The clustering of these facilities, and the subsequent increase in truck traffic, only increases the air pollution burden. But a City Council bill, a zoning amendment, and other new city initiatives may finally start to address this issue. Ultimately, however, the electrification of medium and heavy-duty trucks may be the only way to markedly reduce the air pollution levels from traffic in these areas. The city, and the country as a whole, is far from achieving that goal.
“Antiquated Zoning Regulations”.......In Sunset Park and Red Hook, neighborhoods in the Western part of Brooklyn close to the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, a major highway, there are at least six last-mile facilities, according to the Last Mile Coalition—an advocacy group that brings together multiple community organizations fighting for better regulation of these warehouses.“At these intersections along Third Avenue—which is a really, really dangerous avenue in Sunset Park—you have an increase in truck traffic,” said Nebraska Hernandez, the climate justice hub advocate at UPROSE, Brooklyn’s oldest Latino advocacy group. “These trucks are coming in and out of the industrial waterfront where the facilities are located, and it’s endangering the pedestrians.” Because these facilities often include concrete structures and large parking lots for trucks, they can also increase the urban heat island effect—where highly urbanized areas experience higher temperatures—according to Willis Elkins, the executive director of the Newtown Creek Alliance. The delivery of goods to businesses and homes is complicated in a city like New York, which has so little empty space. Not only are city residents ordering more online than ever before, but local businesses rarely have storage spaces, which means they receive deliveries multiple times a week to keep up with sales.
In May 2024, the deputy mayor for housing, economic development and workforce Maria Torres-Springer, made a commitment to regulate last-mile warehouses by requiring a special permit through the City Planning Commission. “It can get at the clustering of these facilities due to antiquated zoning regulations,” said Kevin Garcia, the senior transportation planner at the Environmental Justice Alliance. “[Communities] only find out about these facilities once they’re up and operating, once they see this increase in truck traffic.” Garcia’s organization is also a member of the Last Mile Coalition, which drafted its own zoning amendment in 2022. It included a request for buffer zones around schools, parks, public housing developments and other last-mile warehouses. Currently, some of these facilities are located in Red Hook, near the largest public housing development in Brooklyn. “These trucks are coming in and out of the industrial waterfront where the facilities are located, and it’s endangering the pedestrians.” City government seeks to regulate not only the siting of new last-mile facilities, but also the indirect pollution coming from present and future warehouses. If City Council Bill 1130—which was introduced in December by Council Member Alexa Alvilés, who represents parts of Sunset Park and Red Hook—passes, then these facilities and the trucks that come and go from them would be required to make efforts to reduce their emissions.
“The number of trucks that are coming to and from that facility would have to be accounted for, and then the warehouse operator would have to work with the city… to come up with an emissions reduction plan,” said Garcia, who supports the bill. “What we want is for these companies, these warehouse operators, to be good neighbors.” The bill could also require warehouse operators to regulate the times and methods of their deliveries—encouraging the use of already-established pollution mitigation measures like night delivery or smaller electric vans for deliveries from the facility to people’s homes. A similar bill, dubbed the “Clean Deliveries Act,” is also working through the state legislature. But these bills are received with some skepticism by trucking companies, according to the Trucking Association of New York. Pre-2007 diesel trucks are the most polluting, and harmful to people’s health because they were sold prior to the Environmental Protection Agency’s more stringent rules on emissions, which required diesel particulate filters. Evolving EPA guidance has reduced emissions from trucks to the point that, if a business replaces a pre-2010 model year truck with a contemporary one, they can reduce negative health impacts by up to 96 percent.
Truck Electrification—a Live Issue in New York......Though these bills offer a potential for more community input in the siting of last-mile facilities, and for pollution mitigation for trucking to these warehouses, the electrification of heavy-duty vehicles is needed to truly reduce the air pollution from trucks that burdens many New York City communities. New York has been leading the charge on incentives for this switch with policies like the Truck Voucher Incentive Program, which offers financial help for trucking businesses looking to transition to zero-emission vehicles, and the city’s Clean Trucks Program, which offers incentives for replacing the oldest and most polluting diesel trucks with less polluting, hybrid, or electric vehicles......READ ON https://insideclimatenews.
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Atlahua has worked outdoors for 20 years in central Florida. She began as a roofer in 2004, then became a farm worker in 2009 when the economic recession slowed down roofing work, before returning to roofing in 2015.
Atlahua said she has noticed a significant increase in the intensity and number of hot days she experiences since she began two decades ago. “One of the things I remember in 2004 when I started was that intense heat days would start around May. Now those heatwaves are felt as early as January,” said Atlahua.Atlahua’s experiences, about the weather in Florida getting hotter, are backed by data and climate science research. A 2024 study conducted by Payless Power utilizing data from the World Weather Online API found Florida is now the hottest state in the US, with an average temperature of 74.1F (23.4C) over the past 15 years. Unusually hot conditions in Florida have been made five times more likely due to the climate crisis. Globally, 2024 is on track to become the hottest year on record, which is currently held by 2023.There are an estimated 2 million outdoor workers in Florida. But despite warming trends, workers here and throughout the US currently have no heat protections on the job. Earlier this year, Republicans in Florida passed a law banning cities and counties from enacting heat protections for workers, amid industry pressure......welcome to America!......read on https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/oct/01/florida-roofers-working-conditions-extreme-heat .....AND....... Life as a California warehouse worker: ‘Products matter more than people’
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- In Congo, aid group Action Against Hunger will stop treating tens of thousands of malnourished children from May, which the charity said will put the children in “mortal danger.”
- In Ethiopia, food assistance stopped for more than 1 million people, according to the Tigray Disaster Risk Management Commission. The Ministry of Health was also forced to terminate the contract of 5,000 workers across the country focused on HIV and malaria prevention, vaccinations and helping vulnerable women deal with the trauma of war.
- In Senegal, the biggest malaria project closed. It distributed bed nets and medication to tens of thousands of people, according to a USAID worker who was not authorized to speak to the media. Maternal and child health and nutrition services also closed. They provided lifesaving care to tens of thousands of pregnant women and treatment that would have prevented and treated acute malnutrition.
- In South Sudan, the International Rescue Committee closed a project providing access to quality health care and nutrition services to more than 115,000 people.
- In Colombia, program shuttered by the Norwegian Refugee Council left 50,000 people without lifesaving support including in the northeast, where growing violence has precipitated a once-in-a-generation humanitarian crisis. It included food, shelter, clean water and other basic items for people displaced in the region.
- In war-torn Sudan, 90 communal kitchens closed in the capital, Khartoum, leaving more than half a million people without consistent access to food, according to the International Rescue Committee.......and there's fourteen more!! https://apnews.com/article/usaid-cuts-hunger-sickness-288b1d3f80d85ad749a6d758a778a5b2
More Articles …
- What’s going on with USAID?........Kennedy created USAID at the Height of the United States’ Cold War
- World’s Poorest Bear the Brunt of the Climate Crisis: 10 Underreported Emergencies.
- Failure of State: For Decades, Alabama’s Mining Regulator Has Left Citizens Unprotected
- Threefold Increase in internal Displacement across the African Continent Since 2009, with Flooding and Drought posing a Growing Threat.
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