Vicky Markham

Vicky Markham
Name: Vicky Markham
Organization / Company: Center for Environment and Population (CEP)
Vicky Markham is Founding Director of the Center for Environment and Population (CEP), an independent non-profit research and policy organization that addresses the relationship between human population and its environmental impacts. Markham has over 25 years of experience in the fields of environment and population science, policy and public outreach. She started the American Association for the Advancement of Science's (AAAS) Population and Sustainable Development International Program, directed World Wildlife Fund International's (WWF) Population Program, and headed their delegation to the UN International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in Cairo. Prior to WWF, Markham was International Planned Parenthood Federation's (IPPF) Information, Education and Communications Officer for London, Africa and Asia. She also worked for the Turner Broadcasting System on documentary films, and was Education Officer for the Secretary of Natural Resources in Puerto Rico. Markham is a graduate of Yale University, and has written and edited extensively on the topics, including the AAAS Atlas of Population and Environment, the US National Report on Population and the Environment, and the US Population, Energy and Climate Change report, all available on CEP's website, www.cepnet.org
Vicky's articles

The Significance For Women and the Environment of a World Population of Seven Billion

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by Vicky Markham, Center for Environment and Population (CEP)

October 28, 2011 - 10:11am (Print)

This month the UN reports that the world population will hit a significant population milestone, 7 billion people. This has meaning for us all, especially in its environment and development impacts – and women are key.

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By The Numbers: Population, Consumption, and Reproductive Health

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by Vicky Markham, Center for Environment and Population (CEP)

August 17, 2011 - 2:04pm (Print)

What are the facts on population, consumption, and reproductive health?  Here they are "by the numbers," including who is using what in terms of energy and climate change; environment; reproductive health, and the status of girls and women.

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