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

  • Pakistan: The Uneasy Tie Between Educational Reform and Violence
    By Maria Khwaja

    Maria Khwaja examines the rhetoric of educational reform during the general election and obstacles on the ground in Pakistan’s largest city, Karachi

    In December, I hurriedly snapped a photo of five men at Qasim-ul-Uloom School in Karachi. Located in the ethnically volatile Orangi-town area, Qasim-ul-Uloom educates a diverse group of children: Pathan, Sindhi, Balochi, and...

    After the Boston Attacks: The Role of Terrorism in the Northern...
    By Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP)

    Because the Boston Bombers came from Chechnya, the country is now back on the public agenda. Uwe Halbach analyzes the situation in Chechnya and sheds light on the background of Islamist terror in the...

    Media and Politics in Georgia: A Partisan View
    By Katherin Machalek

    Despite the recent change in leadership, Georgian media seems unlikely to develop non-partisan reporting in the near future, argues Freedom House analyst Katherin Machalek.

    Amid great fanfare, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili appeared at a rally in Tbilisi on April 19 in support of his United National Movement (UNM), which had ruled the country from 2003 until it lost the...

    Kenya and Zimbabwe: Power Sharing Does Not Guarantee Successful...
    By Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP)

    After a period of power sharing, elections in Kenya have been successful. However, a similar success cannot be expected in Zimbabwe. Judith Vorrath argues that power sharing is not a guarantee for change.

    ...
  • 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...

    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...

    Who are the Real Winners From Complex Financial Regulations?
    By John Bruton

    Former Prime Minister John Bruton asks, why are modern business regulations so complex?

    I believe that, across the Western world, we may be reaching some sort of limit in the complexity of rules governing business. The response to the financial crisis has been ever more complex rules, that only a tiny number of professional advisors could ever hope to remember, or understand...

    Unilateral Economic Sanctions Against Iran: Unexpected Implications (...
    By Nikolay Kozhanov

    The international sanctions against Iran have been effective. However, they also made the Iranian elite more practical and cynical by teaching it how to survive under external economic pressure. This is the last of a two part series. Read part one....

  • 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...

    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...

    Equity in Extractives: A Clarion Call from the Africa Progress Panel
    By Solomon Appiah

    The recently launched African Progress Report 2013 addresses the important topic of equality in extractives, and recieved a lot of media attention. 

    A Little History

    There are critical junctures in human history where a clarion call is issued against an injustice so great but tolerated in one or more parts of the world. The succeeding...

    Who Will Be Syria's Knight Sans Armor? (Part 1/2)
    By Jennifer F. Helgeson

    “Without our voices, we have no choices. And without choices, we could be stuck forever in violence.” A reflection on discussions with Syrians in and outside of Syria. This is the first of a two part series.

    The civil conflict in Syria has raged for over two years. The large majority of aid workers outside of the United Nations World Food Program are...

  • Media and Politics in Georgia: A Partisan View
    By Katherin Machalek

    Despite the recent change in leadership, Georgian media seems unlikely to develop non-partisan reporting in the near future, argues Freedom House analyst Katherin Machalek.

    Amid great fanfare, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili appeared at a rally in Tbilisi on April 19 in support of his United National Movement (UNM), which had ruled the country from 2003 until it lost the...

    Colombia: A Step Back for Gay Marriage
    By Dylan Herrera

    A campaign against discrimination has been launched by gay activists in Colombia. Denying civil rights to a specific group in society, resembles the struggle against anti-Semitism and the African-American civil rights movement.

    In 2005, the government of José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero in Spain approved gay marriage. The big question was whether the approval was...

    Soccer: A Focal Point of Dissent in Saudi Arabia
    By James M. Dorsey

    Saudi Arabia is seeing an emergence of political dissent from soccer fans. The country may be on the verge of licensing women’s soccer clubs that currently operate in a legal nether land.

    Soccer, alongside minority Shiite Muslims and relatives of imprisoned government critics, is emerging as a focal point of dissent in Saudi Arabia; an oil-rich kingdom that, despite...

    Egypt: Art and the Revolution
    By Marie-Jeanne Berger

    Marie-Jeanne Berger looks at the (post)revolutionary art scene rising from the streets of downtown Cairo.

    I’ll Die Anyways

    “I feel lucky that I as an artist haven’t been persecuted during the time of Mubarak,” says Egyptian cartoonist Makhlouf. “Not like [assassinated Palestinian cartoonist] Naji al-Ali, or [imprisoned and...

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    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...

    Who are the Real Winners From Complex Financial Regulations?
    By John Bruton

    Former Prime Minister John Bruton asks, why are modern business regulations so complex?

    I believe that, across the Western world, we may be reaching some sort of limit in the complexity of rules governing business. The response to the financial crisis has been ever more complex rules, that only a tiny number of professional advisors could ever hope to remember, or understand...

    The Growth of Crowdfunding: Risks and Rewards
    By Knowledge @ Wharton

    The success of the "Veronica Mars" Kickstarter campaign has illustrated that crowdfunding is a reliable source of capital for both start-up businesses and established firms.

    The campaign to front a movie based on the cult television show "Veronica Mars" through crowdfunding broke records for the fastest project ever to raise $1 million on Kickstarter. It was...

  • After the Boston Attacks: The Role of Terrorism in the Northern...
    By Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP)

    Because the Boston Bombers came from Chechnya, the country is now back on the public agenda. Uwe Halbach analyzes the situation in Chechnya and sheds light on the background of Islamist terror in the...

    Obama Earns His Nobel Prize on Syria
    By Jeffrey Laurenti

    Syria is not Iraq. Outside Washington, the US seems strongly opposed to deep involvement in the Syrian conflict. Obama's caution is on the mark, argues Jeffrey Laurenti.

    As pressures mount in Washington for a more aggressive American involvement on behalf of at least some rebel groups in Syria, President Obama has seemed intent on proving the Nobel committee was farsighted...

    Alwiya Ahfaad ar-Rasool: A Growing Force in the Syrian Armed...
    By Nicholas A. Heras

    Alwiya Ahfaad ar-Rasool is a growing force against the al-Assad government in Syria. It is poised to become one of the most heavily observed and commonly cited fighting forces of the Syrian Civil War.

    Alwiya Ahfaad ar-Rasool (Brigades of the Descendants of the Prophet) is an increasingly powerful national umbrella organization of locally-based Syrian Sunni Islamist...

    Terrorism and the Other Religions
    By Juan Cole

    Terrorism is a tactic of extremists within each religion, and within secular religions of Marxism or nationalism. No religion, including Islam, preaches indiscriminate violence against innocents, argues Juan Cole.

    Contrary to what is alleged by bigots like Bill Maher, Muslims are not more violent than people of other religions. Murder rates in most of the Muslim world are very...

  • 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...

    The Making of the Higgs
    By Felix Haas

    What is this mysterious particle that the mainstream media calls "the God particle" and that governments spend billions trying to find?

    Scientists working in particle physics were under real pressure to deliver something new, when the Large Hadron Collider at CERN near Geneva started measuring its first low energy collisions in March 2010. They were particularly eager...

  • 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,...