World Water Day 2024: Invest in women for peace and water security

The theme of this year’s World Water Day (March 22), “Water for Peace,” could not come at a more opportune time. Global water, food, and humanitarian crises have reached near-unprecedented levels: As a 2023 conference of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences concluded, “The world is facing the highest...

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Autor principal: Ringler, Claudia
Formato: Blog Post
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170232
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author Ringler, Claudia
author_browse Ringler, Claudia
author_facet Ringler, Claudia
author_sort Ringler, Claudia
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The theme of this year’s World Water Day (March 22), “Water for Peace,” could not come at a more opportune time. Global water, food, and humanitarian crises have reached near-unprecedented levels: As a 2023 conference of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences concluded, “The world is facing the highest number of violent conflicts since the Second World War. These conflicts are major triggers of humanitarian and food crises, reducing access to production factors, social safety nets and trade, and causing forced displacement.” More on World Water Day 2024 from IFPRI’s Claudia Ringler. Humanitarian crises are forcing hundreds of millions of people around the world to live in conditions without dignity. Currently, more than 100 million people are forcibly displaced, while 850 million face medium or high-intensity conflicts and food and water insecurity. Many lack access to basic sanitation and clean water for drinking and other household purposes, and many face hunger. More broadly, 2.2 billion people globally lack access to clean, safe drinking water; while 3.5 billion lack access to safely managed sanitation services; 3.4 million people die each year from scarce or contaminated water sources. Because water is essential to life, the lack of water is a crisis multiplier—an underlying factor contributing to and compounding conflict and humanitarian crises. But this also means that improving water management can reduce the potential for conflict—and when conflict occurs, help to ease its impacts.
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spelling CGSpace1702322025-01-28T14:58:52Z World Water Day 2024: Invest in women for peace and water security Ringler, Claudia water conflicts displacement water security food security The theme of this year’s World Water Day (March 22), “Water for Peace,” could not come at a more opportune time. Global water, food, and humanitarian crises have reached near-unprecedented levels: As a 2023 conference of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences concluded, “The world is facing the highest number of violent conflicts since the Second World War. These conflicts are major triggers of humanitarian and food crises, reducing access to production factors, social safety nets and trade, and causing forced displacement.” More on World Water Day 2024 from IFPRI’s Claudia Ringler. Humanitarian crises are forcing hundreds of millions of people around the world to live in conditions without dignity. Currently, more than 100 million people are forcibly displaced, while 850 million face medium or high-intensity conflicts and food and water insecurity. Many lack access to basic sanitation and clean water for drinking and other household purposes, and many face hunger. More broadly, 2.2 billion people globally lack access to clean, safe drinking water; while 3.5 billion lack access to safely managed sanitation services; 3.4 million people die each year from scarce or contaminated water sources. Because water is essential to life, the lack of water is a crisis multiplier—an underlying factor contributing to and compounding conflict and humanitarian crises. But this also means that improving water management can reduce the potential for conflict—and when conflict occurs, help to ease its impacts. 2024-03-21 2025-01-28T14:58:51Z 2025-01-28T14:58:51Z Blog Post https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170232 en https://www.pas.va/en/publications/scripta-varia/sv154pas/ringler.html Open Access International Food Policy Research Institute Ringler, Claudia. 2024. World Water Day 2024: Invest in women for peace and water security. IFPRI Blog. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://www.ifpri.org/blog/world-water-day-2024-invest-women-peace-and-water-security/
spellingShingle water
conflicts
displacement
water security
food security
Ringler, Claudia
World Water Day 2024: Invest in women for peace and water security
title World Water Day 2024: Invest in women for peace and water security
title_full World Water Day 2024: Invest in women for peace and water security
title_fullStr World Water Day 2024: Invest in women for peace and water security
title_full_unstemmed World Water Day 2024: Invest in women for peace and water security
title_short World Water Day 2024: Invest in women for peace and water security
title_sort world water day 2024 invest in women for peace and water security
topic water
conflicts
displacement
water security
food security
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170232
work_keys_str_mv AT ringlerclaudia worldwaterday2024investinwomenforpeaceandwatersecurity