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A New Quest to Challenge Media Coverage of the Middle East and North Africa
April 14, 2012 3 min. read

The following is a guest appearance by by Adam Hedengren, co-founder and managing editor, and David Hedengren, co-founder and editor-in-chief of YourMiddleEast.Com We are two brothers on a quest to challenge the major media companies’ Middle East and North Africa coverage. We believe that there are no satisfactory sources of news and information in English about […]

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Argentina, the New Nigeria
April 13, 2012 2 min. read

No, it’s not because the land of the Pampas looks to become an energy giant as it taps the world’s third-largest shale gas reserves. Rather, Argentina is becoming the victimizer of internet-gullible Westerners. PRI’s “The World” recently aired a story on foreign nationals recently arrested in Argentina for trafficking cocaine. Says The World anchor Marco […]

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Romney Loses His First Foreign Policy Debate
April 12, 2012 5 min. read

“Romney is a risk when it comes to foreign policy and national security,” read bullet number three in an email titled, “Five things you should know about Mitt Romney,” sent by President Obama’s campaign manager Jim Messina to supporters Wednesday. Mitt Romney took on the role of presumed Republican nominee long before Rick Santorum left […]

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GailForce: Korean Crisis – Why the Surprise? We Are After all Still at War.
April 11, 2012 6 min. read

The North Koreans have announced that sometime between Thursday April 12th and Monday April 16th, as part of the celebration for Kim Il Sung’s 100th birthday and the 80th birthday of the North Korean Army, they will launch a weather satellite, Kwangmyongsong-3, aboard a Unha-3 rocket into space.  The celebration is also expected to see […]

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Spain’s Educated Youth Bound for Chile
April 10, 2012 1 min. read

Mileuristas are 20-something Spaniards who, beyond the current economic crisis, also face a labor market oversaturated with qualified candidates. Despite impressive CVs—many are bilingual and possess graduate degrees—mileuristas can’t earn more than 1,000 euros a month. Hence, they’re forced to live with their parents and, in general, put life plans on hold until they can […]

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Clooney’s Looney Plan for Sudan
April 9, 2012 24 min. read

Hollywood on the Potomac–movie actors deserting Tinseltown to remind the Big Dogs back east that every time an A-list celeb is arrested for picketing a foreign embassy an angel gets his wings.

Actor George Clooney, his father Nick, and four Congressional Democrats were among more than a dozen protesters who descended on the Sudanese Embassy on March 16 for the purpose of crossing, in a disorderly fashion, a police line.
The cast of characters? Along with Clooneys I and II, it included Reps. James Moran (D-VA), Jim McGovern (D-MA), John Olver (D-MA) and Al Green (D-TX). NAACP President Ben Jealous was also arrested, along with Martin Luther King III.
Clooney’s mid-day performance on Mass Ave was the finale to a 3-day tour in DC that included an impassioned plea to a standing-room-only crowd at the Council on Foreign Relations, and dramatic testimony delivered to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee about the miserable state of affairs in the border region of Sudan.
Omar al-Bashir’s military, operating out of Khartoum, is working assiduously to wipe out mostly Christian populations hunkered down on some highly contested, oil-rich real estate to the south.
Clooney, who has frequently taken on the role of the world-weary activist in his films, accuses Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and the ‘same criminals responsible for Darfur’ of conducting a genocidal war against his own people, of starving, maiming, raping, and murdering them.

And he says it as if no one has ever heard it before. . .

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BRICS Strategy 101: Brazil and China
April 8, 2012 3 min. read
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A recent article by IPSNews.net discussed the downside of Brazil’s investment relationship with China. While much of the article discusses the positive exponential growth between Brazil and China, the different nature of growth and long-term investment between the two BRICS are quite different, and in some cases places the two countries on opposite sides of […]

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Sports and Community Building in Africa and the Global South
April 4, 2012 1 min. read

If you are going to be anywhere near Athens, Ohio and the beautiful campus of Ohio University this weekend I strongly encourage you to attend this conference (I’m not certain if it is an enticement to say that I am on the program, but I am, in fact, on the program).

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Life After Chicago: The Future of the Young Atlanticist Working Group
April 3, 2012 7 min. read

By Anne Bilala, Anna Maria Barcikowska, Jordan Becker, Benjamin Bilski, Benedetta Berti, Dustin Dehez, Hristiana Grozdanova, Francisco Galamas, Dominik P. Jankowski, Gonca Noyan, Jelena Petrovic and Timothy Stafford Over the past six weeks, a group of young leaders from all over the world has been actively involved in discussing the future of transatlantic relations through […]

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Senegal: Continuing Into the Light
April 3, 2012 2 min. read

[Mackie Sall, BBC Africa] It has been a few days since the dust cleared in Senegal. The recent presidential election was quite remarkable. After a first ballot could not establish a majority candidate the two finalists, sitting President Abdoulaye Wade (who ran for another term despite constitutional prohibitions against doing so) and former Wade protege […]

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Bolivia: Bond Issuance Imminent?
April 2, 2012 2 min. read

Investors will be interested in purchasing Bolivian government bonds when they are issued, if for nothing more than diversification purposes.  The planet is awash in liquidity.  Furthermore, developed market fiscal crises (read: in Europe and the U.S.), coupled with high commodity prices and huge concentrations in bellwether emerging markets such as Brazil and Mexico, are […]

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Africa: The Human Challenge
April 2, 2012 16 min. read

The recent FPA conference, Africa Emerging (see this link), touched on a number of important themes related to Africa’s improving economic performance and the formidable challenges that lie ahead.  One theme echoed louder than all the rest — the necessity for investment in human capital — in education and health care.  As in most discussions about […]

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