IISD’s Mark Halle recognized with lifetime achievement award for environmental peacebuilding
Mark Halle, a senior fellow with the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD), has won the inaugural Environmental Peacebuilding Lifetime Achievement Award.
October 30, 2019, Winnipeg—Mark Halle, a senior fellow with the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD), has won the inaugural Environmental Peacebuilding Lifetime Achievement Award.
Presented at a conference in Irvine, California, on Oct. 25, by Carl Bruch and Erika Weinthal of the Environmental Peacebuilding Association, this award honours significant contributions made in the field of conflict prevention and resolution through sustainable management of natural resources.
“Mark’s work has been deeply influential in the establishment of the field of environmental peacebuilding and has paved the way for a new generation of scholars,” said Bruch, who is president of the Association. “We want to make sure to honour the early champions who have helped to bring us to where we are now.”
Halle began his career in international negotiations, serving in the diplomatic secretariat of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE). He has spent time working with the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), where he played a key role drafting the World Conservation Strategy, a hallmark document bringing conservation into a framework of sustainable development.
“What counts is not just building an evidence base but working out what it will take to leverage this evidence to secure real change – real positive impact – on the ground,” said Halle after the event. “It is good to pilot and test new approaches, but real change comes from building momentum behind an issue, building a movement that can sweep away conflict, leaving peace and stability in its place.”
An early leader in recognizing the linkages between conflict, peace and the environment, Halle has been a prolific force throughout his career, publishing papers, organizing workshops and getting this issue on the global policy agenda from the late 1990s through to the present.
“We couldn’t be happier for Mark,” says Anne Hammill, director of IISD’s Resilience program. “It’s in no small part because of his passion and dedication that environmental peacebuilding has gone from a niche area of research to a robust field of policy and practice, which continues to expand. IISD looks forward to building upon Mark’s accomplishments and taking this important work to the next level.”
You might also be interested in
New Agreement Marks First Step in Addressing Energy Charter Treaty Legacy
This is an important move to prevent legacy arbitration claims under the treaty, but more remains to be done.
The Indonesia Cooking Diaries Study
This study evaluates the feasibility and implications of switching from cooking with LPG to induction stoves in Indonesian households.
Canada's Sustainable Jobs Legislation: A milestone for workers and communities on the path to net-zero
IISD celebrates the Canadian Sustainable Jobs Act, Bill C-50, being officially passed into law as a significant milestone to engage and support workers and communities in moving to a low-carbon economy.
How Can We Work With Nature to Tackle Drought and Desertification?
Drought is one of the most devastating and pervasive challenges exacerbated by climate change. However, we can work to reduce its effects through nature-based solutions for land restoration and climate-smart agriculture.