A multidisciplinary, multinational, multimedia journal that provides analysis of and context for issues, trends and events of global significance.

  • COPYRIGHT © QAMILO - MARCH 21: SHUTTERSTOCK. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
    Kurds in the Turkosphere: A Growing Sectarian Divide
    By Nathaniel Handy

    The rise of Kurdish political power has persuaded Turkey that it is time to strike a deal with its own Kurds.

    These are fateful days for the Kurdish populations of the Middle East. Caught for almost a century between the competing policies of the states among which they were divided following the First World War, these various communities now inhabit a fast-changing landscape...

    Syria's "Agro-City Regions" - Framing the Civil War
    By Nicholas A. Heras

    In order to fully understand the armed conflict in Syria, one has to grasp the country’s agro-city regional organization.

    In the whirl and the rush of the fast-moving, bloody, and geo-politically significant events ongoing throughout Syria, it is easy to forget that certain classics of Syria studies can help us understand events in the country through culturally relevant...

    UK Asylum Seekers: At the End of the Line
    By Still Human Still Here

    A 2010 report by the Still Human Still Here coalition, “At the End of the Line: Restoring Integrity of the UK’s Asylum System”, documents destitution, inadequate access to health care and inability to work among asylum seekers which are still relevant three years on. The following is an executive summary of the ...

    Sri Lankan Refugees: Voyages of Uncertainty
    By William Crowne

    Even after the end of civil war in Sri Lanka, the fate of its ethnic Tamil refugees remains uncertain.

    The lives of thousands of Sri Lankans who fled the devastating and prolonged violence of the civil war remain in a state of insecurity worldwide. For many, the desperate hope of beginning a stable life far from persecution and violence and soliciting asylum mainly in Europe...

  • Gauging Myanmar’s Cautious Political and Economic Opening
    By Helios Global

    Despite pitfalls, Myanmar's opening offers lucrative investment opportunities.

    Long regarded as one of the world’s most reclusive and authoritarian states, the southeastern Asian nation of Myanmar (also known as Burma) is witnessing a period of cautious political and economic liberalization. Rich in oil and natural gas and an array of minerals vital to the world...

    Change in Venezuela Yields Political and Economic Uncertainty
    By Helios Global

    Despite his declared commitment to toe his predecessor’s ideological line, the gravity of the economic problems affecting Venezuela may force Maduro to depart from some of Chavez’s policies.

    Nicholas Maduro’s narrow electoral triumph over opposition leader Henrique Capriles Radonski in Venezuela’s April 14 elections — to serve out the remainder of...

    India’s 21st Century Challenge: Scientific Education
    By Kathan Shukla

    Economists agree that a country with a knowledge-based economy will take global leadership in the future. However, will India participate in the global competition and be a serious contender?

    The Indian economy, amid a global slowdown, is likely to grow by about 6% in 2013-14. However, if India wants to...

    Africa’s 2040 Employment Problem
    By Lee-Roy Chetty

    North and sub-Saharan Africa are experiencing a demographic youth bulge. However, there is a severe mismatch between the skills possessed by young workers and those demanded by employers. The education system needs to be restructured to build the skills needed to compete globally.

    Over the last decade, six of the world’s ten fastest-growing economies were in sub-Saharan...

  • Refugees and Borders
    By David Holdridge

    Refugees are created by untenable circumstances within boundaries formed by the West.

    Late last fall, I was sitting outside in our farm yard in Vermont, just south of the Canadian border. My wife and I were remarking on the influx of the Common Red Poll, a bird not often seen in such numbers where we live. Upon further investigation, it seems that what had been a rather mild...

    Sri Lankan Refugees: Voyages of Uncertainty
    By William Crowne

    Even after the end of civil war in Sri Lanka, the fate of its ethnic Tamil refugees remains uncertain.

    The lives of thousands of Sri Lankans who fled the devastating and prolonged violence of the civil war remain in a state of insecurity worldwide. For many, the desperate hope of beginning a stable life far from persecution and violence and soliciting asylum mainly in Europe...

    Refugees in Africa's Great Lakes Region: A Perpetual State of...
    By Lucy Hovil

    Repatriating refugees in the Great Lakes region often disregards individuals' circumstances, and may even put them at risk.

    A Refugee Life

    Jean-Marc is Burundian by nationality, but has never lived in Burundi. In 1976, he was born into exile in Rwanda where he lived as a refugee until the 1994 genocide when his father was killed and...

    INFOGRAPHIC: The Real Cost of Clothes Made in Bangladesh
    By Robert Rebholz

    Is "Made in Bangladesh" really cheaper than "Made in USA"?

    *[This infographic was originally featured by...

  • The Myths of Foreign Affairs School (Part 2/2)
    By Brandon Scott

    Brandon Scott compares the professions IR students imagine working in, with the real world of actual IR professionals. This is the last of a two part series. Read part one here.

    6: You will be Living in Paris in a Swank Apartment

    This...

    Translating Kurdish Poetry: Not for the Faint of Heart
    By Ashley Lohmann

    Translating Kurdish, Iraqi, and other regional poetry has the power to shatter stereotypes, ease local tensions, and show the world a side of the region it has never seen.

    Giggles. Such was the reaction Marie LaBrosse received every time she mentioned the name “Sheikh Raza” in her new hometown of Sulaimani in Kurdish northern Iraq.

    LaBrosse had recently moved...

    Media Should Not Make Money
    By Atul Singh

    “The sole aim of journalism should be service” (Mahatma Gandhi).

    Media is in crisis globally, and democracy as we have known it is under threat. Democracy works when voters make informed choices. The American colonies fought for independence because Tom Paine wrote “Common Sense,” which was published widely. India’s independence struggle was...

    The Myths of Foreign Affairs School (Part 1/2)
    By Brandon Scott

    Brandon Scott compares the professions IR students imagine working in, with the real world of actual IR professionals. This is the first of a two part series.

    In my 13 years experience in the field of International Relations (IR), I have: run intelligence sources in Bosnia and...

  • Media Should Not Make Money
    By Atul Singh

    “The sole aim of journalism should be service” (Mahatma Gandhi).

    Media is in crisis globally, and democracy as we have known it is under threat. Democracy works when voters make informed choices. The American colonies fought for independence because Tom Paine wrote “Common Sense,” which was published widely. India’s independence struggle was...

    An Indian Conundrum: The Copy-Paste Culture
    By Kathan Shukla

    There is a culture of not recognizing intellectual property as someone’s property, in India. The big fish with power and money may influence the people at large, and the real creative intellectual may never receive due credit.

    In recent times, there has been a lot of empty rhetoric of “moving towards [a] knowledge economy” in policy circles. The bureaucrats,...

    Global Business in Emerging Markets: Potential for Transformational...
    By Jean AbiNader

    The role of workforce development in crafting solutions should not be overlooked or minimized as simply giving people jobs. Jean AbiNader analyzes the importance of job skills training in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), global dexterity, the renegotiation of the social contract, and impact investing in a post-Arab Uprisings environment.

    At a recent corporate...

    Protecting Singapore Businesses from Cyber-Espionage
    By S.Rajaratnam School of Internationa...

    Cyber-espionage is a real and growing threat to businesses and economies in Singapore. Some counter-measures can be taken by the private sector. But the government plays an important role in protecting its businesses from cyber-exploitation.

    By Senol Yilmaz

    Over the few decades, Singapore’s economy has moved up from a mere producer of material...

  • COPYRIGHT © TOWN NEAR THE ROCK, SYRIA: SHUTTERSTOCK. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
    Syria's "Agro-City Regions" - Framing the Civil War
    By Nicholas A. Heras

    In order to fully understand the armed conflict in Syria, one has to grasp the country’s agro-city regional organization.

    In the whirl and the rush of the fast-moving, bloody, and geo-politically significant events ongoing throughout Syria, it is easy to forget that certain classics of Syria studies can help us understand events in the country through culturally relevant...

    Militarization and Impunity: The Anti-AFSPA Movement in Kashmir
    By Tanvi Mani

    Is it time the Indian government repealed the controversial Armed Forces Special Powers Act in Kashmir?

    The Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) stands as a testament to the clout of the Indian National Army and the tenacity with which it wields its power. Treading the thin line between a leviathan regiment and a liberal institution working for the welfare of the people, the...

    Will Northern Irish Terrorism Affect the G8 Summit?
    By Paul Ashley

    Paul Ashley analyzes the potential impact of Northern Irish militant groups on the upcoming G8 Summit. [Note: This report was produced in collaboration with 361 Security.]               

    Security Situation

    On June 17-18, the 39th G8 Summit...

    Negotiating in Mali: Why Failure is Not an Option (Part 3/3)
    By Christos Kyrou

    After the successful French intervention in Mali, a fragile balance still exists in the country. This article is the last of a three part series. Read part one here.

    The Greatest Challenges for the Government

    Repairing a tarnished image: Even...

  • India’s 21st Century Challenge: Scientific Education
    By Kathan Shukla

    Economists agree that a country with a knowledge-based economy will take global leadership in the future. However, will India participate in the global competition and be a serious contender?

    The Indian economy, amid a global slowdown, is likely to grow by about 6% in 2013-14. However, if India wants to...

    The Glowing Plant: A New Paradigm for Funding Science?
    By Deeba Fahami

    In a world of austerity and shrinking research budgets, the crowd-funding method at the core of the Glowing Plant Project offers a radically different approach to scientific research funding.

    The first synthetic biology project that has launched on Kickstarter, the...

    The Importance of Technology in Economic and Social Development
    By Lee-Roy Chetty

    Mobile technology offers extensive help on various forms of social and economic development. Lee-Roy Chetty explores why such initiatives can have a positive impact in Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, and beyond.

    Technological innovation and Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) represent a way for developing world nations to foster economic development, improve levels of...

    Countering Maritime Piracy: A Collaborative Approach
    By Ari Katz

    Synergizing resources and technology from private and public stakeholders, can produce more effective and cost efficient counter-maritime piracy measures.

    In light of sequestration, analysts project that countering maritime piracy will take a back seat to the Asia rebalancing and other more existential US foreign policy issues. Unfortunately, this rationing of focus has the...

  • Combating Diabetes: Some Things Money Can’t Buy
    By INSEAD - Business School

    Faced with a deadly and expensive diabetes epidemic, Gulf states are looking at innovative business marketing techniques to promote healthy behaviour and keep a cap on spiralling health costs.

    By Jane Williams

    Strong oil prices have bankrolled an affluent lifestyle in the Middle East’s Gulf region, with deadly consequences. Rich foods, decreased...

    Politics of Scarcity
    By Dr. M. Krishnamurthi

    The scarcity of  food, water, education, and transportation is negatively affecting both urban and rural populations in India.

    More than sixty percent of the Indian population depends upon agriculture and agriculture-related activities for their livelihood and live in rural areas. When they followed traditional practices, all agricultural inputs were locally available such...

    Mindfulness and the Pursuit of Happiness
    By Norman Farb

    How can meditation make us happier?

    There are a lot of advantages to modern living. Advances in nutrition and sanitation have increased the human lifespan almost threefold compared to ages past. Modern technology provides widespread conveniences historically reserved for the aristocracy. Modern medicine can cure an increasing variety of ailments. Around the world, billions of...

    A Spiritual Life: Exclusive Interview with HH Sri Sri Ravi Shankar
    By Sri Sri Ravi Shankar

    Sri Sri Ravi Shankar discusses a new era of spirituality that is compatible with modern, western living.

    Interview conducted by Aaron Prosser.

    Question 1: It seems like more people are searching for inner peace and meaning in their life. This is especially true in...

  • Guyana: Mining, Forests and Indigenous Rights
    By Oda Almås

    In light of increasing gold prices on the world market, the actual commitment under-pinning Guyana’s agreement with Norway to save its rainforests, which also includes an obligation to protect the rights of indigenous peoples, can be questioned. 

    The unprecedented high price of gold on the world market is leading to rapidly increasing pressure on land that may...

    One Horned Rhinos in Assam: Drones to the Rescue
    By Nava J. Thakuria

    In India, elite forces on the ground and drones in the sky aim to safeguard Assam's wildlife.

    Assam, which has been in the national and international media for incidents related to insurgency turned terrorism, is on the verge  of witnessing a new battle. Unmanned remote-controlled aircraft popularly referred to as drones which are being used by NATO forces in...

    The Glowing Plant: A New Paradigm for Funding Science?
    By Deeba Fahami

    In a world of austerity and shrinking research budgets, the crowd-funding method at the core of the Glowing Plant Project offers a radically different approach to scientific research funding.

    The first synthetic biology project that has launched on Kickstarter, the...

    Americans Still Want Renewable Energy
    By Anthony W. Orlando

    Americans still want investment in renewable energy in a bid to distance themselves from Middle Eastern oil producers.

    James Gaddy knows manure. Chicken manure, to be exact. He’s spent years working with it. That may not sound like much fun to you and me, but Gaddy is on a mission to power the earth — and, in the process, save it.

    Specifically,...