Articles

Mugabe: How Much Longer?

Stephen Chan • Jan 19 2012 • Articles

Mugabe’s regime is hardly on its last legs and is not threatened beyond key points. He is strong enough to intimidate the most senior of his ambitious colleagues and there are many who trace the death in 2011 of Solomon Mujuru to his door.

Cultural symbols, biocolonialism and the commodification of rural and indigenous bodies

Hannah Butt • Jan 18 2012 • Articles

The world’s most powerful institutions and corporations are now interested in subaltern people, because they represent a commercial “opportunity”.

China’s Relations with Africa and the American Context

Ian Taylor • Jan 18 2012 • Articles

Africa is an emerging strategic partner of China. As a result, some over-excited analysts talk of a major competition between China and the United States in Africa.

Understanding the Human Terrain in Warfare: A Clash of Moralities

Dan G. Cox • Jan 18 2012 • Articles

Proof of concept programs are, by their very nature, cutting edge experiments funded to enhance the efficiency and morality of the warfare the U.S. Army is charged with conducting. It is unreasonable to assume that these programs will come out of the box perfect.

The Challenging Road to Reconciliation in Rwanda

Ervin Staub • Jan 17 2012 • Articles

In the 1994 Rwandan genocide, Hutus killed about 700 hundred thousand Tutsis. This piece will discuss institutions and processes of reconciliation since the genocide, discussing both their positive and problematic aspects.

Nationalism in the 21st Century

Claire Sutherland • Jan 17 2012 • Articles

Nationalist ideology continues to shape global politics today, but twenty-first century nationalists must reconsider the meaning of self-determination, independence, autonomy and sovereignty in an increasingly interconnected world.

Gender Parity in the UK’s Legislative Bodies: A Desirable Goal?

Janice Atkinson • Jan 17 2012 • Articles

I have tried recruiting my female friends and family into politics. I tell them we are looking for people like them: mums; business women; community workers; teachers. They all look at me with horror.

A New Constitution for Turkey Without Democracy

Murat Akan • Jan 12 2012 • Articles

Turkey may be heading for yet another constitutional change, but not for a societally-based and well-deliberated democratic constitution writing. Meanwhile, deliberations continue under a façade of the moderate Islamists as the vanguards of anti-military democratic politics in Turkey.

The Resource Curse: Governing Extractive Industries in the Global South

Jewellord Nem Singh • Jan 9 2012 • Articles

The paradox of the resource curse was that countries with natural resources performed worse than those with scarce or no resources. The controversy surrounding the thesis is whether its key claims are accurate.

Is political Islam on the losing side of the Arab Spring in Egypt?

Afshin Shahi • Jan 9 2012 • Articles

Egyptian progress towards democracy is still in doubt amidst a backdrop of deep social and economic troubles. Providing effective democratic structures are created and upheld, it is likely the Muslim Brothers and other Islamic forces will gradually lose support.

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