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Around 42% India’s Land Area Under Drought, Worsening Farm Distress In Election Year

About 42 percent of India’s land area is facing drought, with 6 percent exceptionally dry–four times the spatial extent of drought last year, according to data for the week ending March 26, 2019, from the Drought Early Warning System (DEWS), a real-time drought monitoring platform.

“Before monsoon, which is still far away, the next two or three months are going to be difficult in many of these regions,” Vimal Mishra, associate professor at the Indian Institute of Technology, Gandhinagar, and the developer of DEWS, told IndiaSpend.

Failed monsoon rains are the primary reason for the current situation. The North-East monsoon, also known as ‘post-monsoon rainfall’ (October-December) that provides 10-20 percent of India’s rainfall, was deficient by 44 percent in 2018 from the long-term normal of 127.2 mm, as per data from the India Meteorological Department.

Deepti Singh.
Singh

“Today, we live in a much warmer world than we did in the 1870s. So, a warmer climate can have adverse effects on droughts making it more extreme,” said Deepti Singh, assistant professor at the School of the Environment at Washington State University, U.S., She said droughts during 1876-77 and 2015-16 were triggered by extremely strong and long-lasting El Ninos. “However, droughts have continued to persist in India post-2016 despite a change from El Nino conditions, which to me is an indication of the effect of global warming,” she said.

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Bloomberg Quint
ThinkProgress
Daily Evergreen

WSU Vancouver announces 2019 Distinguished Woman awards

Three Southwest Washington women were honored with Distinguished Woman of the Year awards for making a difference in the lives of others at Washington State University Vancouver’s 11th annual Women of Distinction celebration. Held March 28, the event wrapped up Women’s History Month at the university.

Ana Betancourt Macias.2019 awardees include Ana Betancourt Macias, a junior majoring in sociology. She is the director of legislative affairs, president of WSU Vancouver Collegiate LULAC, and a member of the WSU Vancouver Council on Equity, Diversity and Inclusion. She inspires Latinas to use their struggles as strengths. Betancourt Macias is positively changing lives through her message and her work.

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WSU Insider
The Colombian

Dr. Universe: How many peas would fit in the sun?

Kimberly Vincent.
Vincent

Our sun is so massive, you could fit more than one million earths inside of it. To find out how many peas would fit inside the biggest object in our solar system, I decided to ask my friend and mathematician Kimberly Vincent at Washington State University.

The volume of the sun is about 1,410,000,000,000,000 cubic kilometers, or more than 2 million Pacific Oceans.

Using a similar calculation, students estimated you could fit about 141,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 peas in the sun.

We could estimate 141 sextillion peas could fit in the sun.

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Dr. Universe

Measuring America’s Health

The second annual Healthiest Communities rankings, compiled in collaboration with the Aetna Foundation, offer insight into how dozens of factors come together to shape health across the country. By providing a diagnostic scan of the nation, Healthiest Communities aims to draw a clear link between where people live and how well they live—and for how long.

Justin Denney.“There’s something about the places where we spend time that influence our health and well-being,” says Justin Denney, an associate professor of sociology and a health disparities researcher at Washington State University. “Is there access to safe housing, opportunities for employment or to get fresh foods—or are you bound by convenience stores that are around?”

Like many of the top counties in the Healthiest Communities rankings, Douglas County, Colorado, is well-educated and wealthy, with a median household income of about $111,000 in recent years.

Many of America’s poorest counties, meanwhile, fall far outside the rankings, underscoring the crucial need for cross-sector partnerships that promote health equity and ensure wealth is not the only path to wellness.

“We absolutely should be trying to improve resources available to all kinds of families in all kinds of places,” Denney says.

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US News & World Report

Researcher discusses importance of data for missing, murdered Native women

Annita Lucchesi.Murders and disappearances of Native American women have risen to prominence lately, inspiring protests and vigils around Montana and legislation in both Helena and Washington, D.C.

There’s broad consensus that improving data access is vital to helping law enforcement solve cold cases. Existing studies have shown Native women face far higher rates of violence than their non-Native counterparts, a problem that’s been variously attributed to racism, insufficient resources, jurisdictional gaps between law enforcement agencies, and other factors. But as Annita Lucchesi began researching this issue while a master’s student in American Studies at Washington State University, she found the underlying data lacking..

“The more I looked, the messier it got,” the Southern Cheyenne researcher told an audience in Polson on Monday, describing how the MMIW Database came to be. This database now logs thousands of cases of murdered and missing indigenous people throughout the Americas, and she sees a variety of ways it could stem this trend.

While databases exist, she said, “they all collect different kinds of things and so if you’re trying to make sense of this issue, you’re going to look at 50 different places (and) the more confused you’re going to get.”

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Billings Gazette