The high costs of resource-based conflicts for people & planet
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 Published On Apr 16, 2024

On this episode of the Mongabay Newscast, journalist Dahr Jamail joins co-host Rachel Donald to discuss the ways many international conflicts are based on resource scarcity.

Notable as an unembedded reporter during the US-led Iraq invasion, Jamail expands on the human and ecological costs to these conflicts, the purported reasons behind them, how those justifications are covered in the media, and the continued stress these conflicts put on society.

"There was a saying a ways back by Lester Brown [who] said 'land is the new gold and water is the new oil.' And I think that that perspective is really kind of driving what we're seeing," Jamail says.

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Image credit: All post-9/11 wars are estimated to have contributed 1,267 million metric tons of greenhouse gases, according to the Costs of War Project at Brown University. A convoy of U.S. Marine Corps (USMC) High-Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWV), assigned to D/Company, 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 1st Marines Division, arrives in Northern Iraq, during a sandstorm. Image by the United States Marine Corps via Wikimedia Commons (Public Domain).
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Timecodes

(00:00) Introduction
(01:57) From Alaska to Iraq
(10:59) Resource scarcity and the geopolitics of war
(29:31) New horizons and new tensions
(35:09) Post-show discussion
(50:05) Credits

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