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China and Africa
September 22, 2011 6 min. read

It is interesting to see how international institutions define development as a promotion of specific economic development model. Well developed development practice requires a certain level of state intervention to protect private property and enforce laws that respond to social changes. I have no doubt that such institutions contributed in promoting and facilitating development practices […]

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Amnesty International Warns of Growing Risk of Civil War in Yemen
September 20, 2011 3 min. read

Amnesty International Calls on Authorities to Stop Attacks on Peaceful Protesters, as Security Forces Kill Dozens (Amnesty International–New York): Yemeni authorities must immediately stop the killing of peaceful protesters by security forces, Amnesty International said today, after dozens of people were shot dead in the capital, Sana’a, since Sunday. The organization called for an independent, […]

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The EU to speak with a single voice?
September 11, 2011 2 min. read
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The spirit of the EU 2020 energy strategy seems to be well underway. The EU is planning to streamline the practice of deal making in the energy sector between EU members and outside parties and fortify the voice of Brussels. This sounds difficult, as the EU is home to half a billion consumers and about […]

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GailForce: Reflections on 9/11
September 8, 2011 7 min. read

Been off the blogosphere for the last couple of weeks. My back went out and the only comfortable position I could find was lying down. Guess I went at the bike riding thing too heavily this summer! I’m of the mind that there is a seed of good in every adversity. In this case it […]

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Cities and Growth: A Measure for a National Economy in Your Neighbourhood
September 8, 2011 3 min. read

Emerging economies are often described as being in the process of increased urbanisation. In industrialised countries the process of growth in manufacturing is often met with an influx of population from rural areas into the centres of production within metropolitan areas. This process which took place in the late 19th century in Europe and North […]

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Where are the Progressive African Voices?
September 3, 2011 2 min. read

One of the many indignities that African countries suffer is that their circumstances are often debated in the absence of voices from the continent. Part of the problem is lack of networks between African universities and policy institutions with partners in the North and also an absence of websites and journals that give the African […]

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What’s Wrong With Doctrines?
September 2, 2011 7 min. read

A lot of really strange analysis has been coming out on the subject of Obama Administration foreign policy following the apparant toppling of the Ghaddafi regime in Libya. Broadly criticized by opinion leaders of the left and right on his Libya policy until recently, it seems that many decided this past week that the policy […]

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Our Fatality Free Month in Iraq
September 1, 2011 3 min. read

As if fueled by some cosmic irony to enhance sales of Dick Cheney’s In My Time, we have welcome news from the Near East! For the first time since the former Veep’s “Coalition of the Willing” sand-plowed Saddam’s twisted regime in 2003, an entire month has passed without a single United States service member dying. […]

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And the Winner of Liberia’s 1st Qualified Men’s Marathon is…
August 30, 2011 2 min. read

An Ethiopian by the name of Mehari Gebre. But no matter, young Liberian Lucy Massaquoi,16, took the gold in the women’s event and a fun time was had by all. The event, which was held on August 28th, was the brain-child of BHP Billiton, the Australian mining and energy giant who has recently taken a […]

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President Saleh’s August Speech: Analysis
August 29, 2011 7 min. read

About three weeks ago, President Saleh delivered a televised speech to the nation, in which he reassured his followers that he would indeed be coming back, his convalescence coming to a close. His rather lengthy address put to rest rumors that the Saudis and the Americans had managed to exert enough political pressure on the […]

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Liberia’s Hanging Chad
August 25, 2011 2 min. read

In my inaugural post for the FPA blog I would like discuss recent events in the country where I have most recently been: Liberia. On Tuesday the 23rd Liberians went to the polls for a referendum vote on three issues. One of them was whether Supreme Court justices should retire at age 70 as is […]

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The Libyan Struggle
August 25, 2011 3 min. read

After Gaddafi Libya may not find what it is looking for. As I write this, the majority of pro-Gaddafi forces have lost, or are in the process of losing their resistance against the mostly civilian rebels. The pictures and stories coming from Libya are not incomparable to Egypt and/or Tunisia. Young men holding rifles in […]

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