Just recently, key global economists highlighted the main factors that lead to economic inequality in the world:...

Just recently, key global economists highlighted the main factors that lead to economic inequality in the world: epidemics, wars, violent revolutions and the collapse of states, but today we are all witnesses to how climate risks and disasters have become a new challenge for everyone, and how they negatively affect all three OSCE “baskets”.
Views from the Frontline (Views from the Frontline data visualization platform: how well do you know your community’s resilience priorities?)
A new methodology developed with Bir Duino members from the Global Network of Civil Society Organizations for Disaster Reduction (GNDR) in recent years has shown that there are multiple risks and disasters in the next five years (92 uranium tailings dams, one of them Mailuu Suu, Kyrgyzstan, is listed among the 10 most dangerous in the world, the Kumtor tailings dam) that have become threats under the systemic impunity, shrinking civic space, as well as new challenges that affect the lives and livelihoods of vulnerable people with whom our members work.
In addition to natural hazards, threats today include climate change, pandemics, global economic and financial instability (especially following the statements of the US President), terrorism and transnational criminal networks, cyber instability, geopolitical instability, various forms of conflicts and wars, and much more.
Six interconnected drivers of risk have been emphasised by local community leaders together with researches and GNDR experts: climate change, conflicts, gender inequality, food and water insecurity, urbanisation, and forced displacement