Children at Risk for a Dream
September 9, 2009 4 min. read

The US-Mexican boarder is nearly 2,000 miles long and is the worlds most crossed border, with some 250 million people crossings every year. Every year it is estimated that some 400,000 and 1 million people attempt to illegally cross US borders, all are in search of the promised land and a chance for a better […]

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When the Police are the Problem
September 8, 2009 3 min. read

A recent story in The Guardian highlighted the ongoing abuses of police forces in Venezuela and the difficulties in bring about police reform.  Increasingly, police in Venezuela act with complete impunity and growing brutality against criminals, their families, and anyone else caught in between.  Stories of disappearances and false imprisonment by police, especially in Caracas, […]

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The Changing Face of Child Labor
September 8, 2009 5 min. read

When one thinks of child labor in the context of our American Labor Day Holiday or the International Day of Labor, otherwise known as May Day, the mind drifts back to images of the Industrial revolution of the 18th Century to children toiling in factories and mines in the UK and US. However the roots […]

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#1 Arms Dealer to Developing World = USA
September 7, 2009 2 min. read

The worst thing about knowing something you don’t really want to is having it confirmed over and over again.  At a time where some of the wealthier nations are seeing the end of a financial crisis (France and Germany for instance) – the developing ones are scrambling to get desperately needed cash to fill their […]

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France to Ban Burqas, Niqabs? What is at Stake–Rights to Religion, Rights to Gender Equality, and the Rights of a State to Remain Politically and Religiously "Neutral"
September 7, 2009 7 min. read

France’s center-right and left political parties are coalescing around a controversial issue: the idea of a national, parliamentary ban on the niqab.  Proponents of the ban cite the threat of Islamism to France’s position as a secular state, and argue further that the niqab is both a symbol of and an act of the oppression of […]

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Elderly Immigrants in the US: A Growing Population Faces Cultural Isolation
September 6, 2009 2 min. read

As with any change in life, growing older can present its challenges. Beyond relatively incipient social-networking programs like Twitter and Facebook, or newfangled cell phones to deal with, there is the transition from the workforce to retirement, and adjustments as some friends or spouses pass away. New routines must be established. How is this time […]

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Delay in Trying a Head of State: Charles Taylor
September 6, 2009 3 min. read

After nearly two months of questioning in the Hague, the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) has temporarily adjourned the Defense’s questioning of former Liberian President Charles Ghankay Taylor, due to the illness of lead counsel Courtenay Griffiths QC. The SCSL, an ad hoc international-national court – or ‘hybrid’ tribunal – was established by the […]

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The Continuing Battle Against Child Labor
September 6, 2009 3 min. read

As we kick back and relax for our long Labor Day  weekend, enjoying some work and stress free days among family and friends, relishing in the freedoms of a fair wage, children across the globe toil away as child labors.  Often these children, who sometimes are only a few years old, are placed in hazardous […]

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Least developed countries not receiving adequate aid for global crisis impact
September 5, 2009 2 min. read

BRUSSELS, 3 September 2009 The President of the African Development Bank Group Donald Kaberuka said that the international response to the global crisis and the reform of the global financial aid architecture has failed to take into consideration the issues facing least developed countries. “People here call it a financial crisis but in Africa it […]

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Through the Kazakh Looking Glass
September 4, 2009 5 min. read

A court in Kazakhstan sentenced a prominent human rights activist to four years imprisonment for manslaughter yesterday in a case that many observers believe was politically motivated.  The charges against Yevgeny Zhovtis stem from a car accident in July where Zhovtis hit and killed a man while driving his car.  However the initial forensic exam […]

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Mocking Affirmative Action in the Mexican Congress
September 4, 2009 2 min. read

It is no secret that Mexico lags well behind European, North American and other Latin American countries in regards to women’s participation in government. Though Mexican women have been legally entitled to vote and stand for election since 1953, there is still a wide gap in terms of their equal representation in the three branches […]

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Human Trafficking Awareness Month in DC
September 4, 2009 4 min. read

September is Washington D.C.’s Human Trafficking Awareness Month, the event which was established thanks to the efforts of the DC Task Force on Human Trafficking. The Task Force was established in 2004 with the DC police department and the DC US Attorney’s office, membership is now open to open to any D.C. metropolitan area law […]

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