Contexte
These sources analyze the intersection of demographic history, environmental crisis, and public policy, beginning with a study of the long-term population impacts of the First World War. This historical perspective highlights how massive conflict creates vulnerable “sacrificed generations” through high mortality rates, reduced life expectancy, and permanent shifts in national demographics. Transitioning to modern challenges, the texts examine how social protection systems are indispensable tools for achieving climate justice by shielding the poor from environmental shocks. The documentation emphasizes that climate finance must be strategically leveraged to “climate-proof” these social safety nets, ensuring they can support a just transition to a low-carbon economy. By integrating social welfare into global climate strategies, governments can better address the human dimension of ecological instability and protect marginalized communities from livelihood loss. Ultimately, the sources advocate for a multisectoral approach where institutional collaboration and sustainable funding protect the most at-risk populations from both historical and future crises.
Chapitres
0:00— Introduction0:36— Deux scénarios opposés1:07— Le scénario optimiste2:15— Les briques technologiques4:00— Le scénario dystopique5:30— Conclusion et appel
Sources
- Circular Economy - Environment - European Commission
- Family-friendly France? - International Viewpoint - online socialist magazine
- Générations sacrifiées : le bilan démographique de la Grande Guerre | INED
- La guerre de 1914-1918 : un cataclysme démographique. Effets immédiats et conséquences à long terme de la guerre de 1914-1918 sur la démographie française
- More boys are born after wars and scientists call it ‘Returning soldier effect’ - Times of India
- News | Plant Production and Protection | Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
- TRENDS Research & Advisory - Water Implications of AI-Driven Digital Infrastructure Expansion
- The effect of war on marriage, divorce and birth rates - PubMed
- Trade growth likely to feel tariff hit in 2026: WTO | Global Trade Review (GTR)
- https://archined.ined.fr/download/publication/40_b7IsBU9Wft_qNW1Rm/62b92e16e2b6448f8228d1d57fd8f5541701166791849.pdf
- https://civis.eu/storage/files/9-lawal-polycrisis-and-sdgs-in-africa-v2-sep-2025.pdf
- https://claudeberrebi.huji.ac.il/sites/default/files/claudeberrebi/files/2015-berrebi-ostwald-oep-fertility.pdf
- https://earth4all.life/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/E4A_SDGs-for-All_Report.pdf
- https://economics.ucr.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/Vandenbroucke-corrected-paper-for-4-15-13-seminar.pdf
- https://eohhs.ri.gov/sites/g/files/xkgbur226/files/2025-02/Health%20Care%20System%20Planning%20Foundational%20Report%20-%20December%202024.pdf
Voir les 4 sources restantes
- https://epc2022.eaps.nl/uploads/210085
- https://usp2030.org/wp-content/uploads/USP2030-Social-protection-and-climate-finance.pdf
- https://www.crowe.com/-/media/crowe/firms/middle-east-and-africa/ae/crowehorwathae/news/the-agentic-ai-shift-13-02-2026.pdf
- https://www.ined.fr/sites/default/files/imported_images/introduction.bouleversement.ouvrage.grande.guerre.fr.pdf
