Going Backwards: The Crisis in Venezuela
January 29, 2016 4 min. read

Chavez’s 21st century socialism has failed, pushing Venezuela to the brink of a major humanitarian crisis.

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Globalization has not reached Somalia, but ‘junglification’ has
July 16, 2014 5 min. read

  Considering the violent political unrest in various parts of the world, many accept the claim that the 21st century will go down in history as a period of global reorder, perpetual insecurity and bloodshed. If the grim headlines of the first decade could be taken as forecasts of the storms ahead, many nation-states are […]

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Brazil’s World Cup and the True Voice of the BRICS
June 6, 2014 5 min. read

It appears that when the world was praising the BRICS nations a few years ago, that Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa were seen as the countries that would dominate the world economy in the future, and that any opportunity to link a company or organization to these mega-economies would pay off without any […]

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What “Extending a Hand to the Poor” Too Often Really Means
August 7, 2013 5 min. read

  The Irish playwright Brendan Behan once opined that, “I have never seen a situation so dismal that a policeman couldn’t make it worse.” Behan was hardly an unbiased commentator, having misspent his youth in activities that assured a mutual antipathy between the literary giant and the law enforcement community, but the findings of Transparency […]

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Reducing Remittance Costs: A Matter of Competition, Technology — and Post Offices
July 22, 2013 7 min. read

  Ten years ago, it was typical for 20 percent or more of the money a migrant worker sent to his or her family in a developing nation to be eaten up by transmission costs. Thanks to factors including increased competition and technological advances, that percentage has dropped steadily over the past decade, so that […]

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A New Tool for Climate Change and Global Health?
October 31, 2012 3 min. read

This week, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) published a new tool to address the growing health risks associated with climate change. The “Atlas of Human Health and Climate” explores the exacerbation of “diseases of poverty” (including those related to food and water insecurity), emergency medical situations related to extreme […]

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New Photos of the Siem Reap Rubbish Dump
July 1, 2012 3 min. read
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I can recall being in graduate school in New York having a conversation about Third World development with a fellow student, an American originally from Connecticut.  At the time, the end of 2010, I had just returned from a stint with the South African Human Rights Commission and was pretty sour on the potential for […]

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Updates on Women, Children, and Human Rights Around the Globe
June 25, 2012 4 min. read

Children of the Earth summit — 1992 and 2012 As young people weigh in with their impressions of the ongoing Rio+20 conference, this documentary series, Zero Ten Twenty, looks back on the lives of children born in 1992–the year of the groundbreaking Earth Summit. Working to include women in development recipe The United Nations is hosting […]

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Tale of Yemen
October 25, 2011 4 min. read

  Despite its oil and gas resources and its vast agricultural lands, Yemen is the poorest country by far of the Arabic Peninsula with the majority of its population leaving under US$2 per day. For several years now  UNICEF and other humanitarian agencies have been working in Yemen towards finding a solution to solve malnourishment […]

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The Russian Dream: Sadder, but Truer, than the American One
August 2, 2011 3 min. read

They may no longer be on the opposites side of the Cold War, but Russians and Americans still see the world in opposite ways. While even most blue collar Americans believe they are middle class, 45% of Russians consider themselves to be poor, according to Svetlana Kononova’s piece in Russia Profile, which relies on new […]

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A history of Brazilian violence
July 17, 2010 2 min. read

With the possible exceptions of soccer and samba, Brazil’s global reputation is shaped more by its high rates of violent crime than anything else. Romanticized in popular films and culture, the country’s favelas are the most visible symbol of the issue. But according to the Map of Violence 2010, a new report from the São […]

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Technological Prowess and Entrenched Poverty
July 16, 2010 4 min. read

Two events occurring within hours of each other earlier this week illustrate India’s potential for great power status as well as the vast distance the country still has to travel to fulfill its global ambitions.

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