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What the world needs now

In the early 1890s, Mahatma Gandhi worked as a lawyer in South Africa. One day, while travelling in a first-class train compartment on business, he was ordered to move to third class, which was designated for non-whites. Gandhi refused, producing his valid first-class ticket as evidence of his right to stay. At the next stop, he was thrown off the train. This experience transformed the shy, apolitical young lawyer into the bold, fearless activist whose campaign for equality and human rights was brought to an end by an assassin’s bullet 60 years ago.

Gandhi was undoubtedly one of the great political and spiritual figures of the 20th century. But who thinks much about him today? To many, he seems like a quaint figure from the bad old days when colonialism, racism and discrimination ruled. Hasn’t Gandhi’s message of justice, tolerance and non-violent change gone mainstream? And haven’t all those battles from last century been fought and won? Think again.

Read more in Ode Magazine…

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    December 28, 2007 | 1:12 AM Comments  0 comments



    Number of conflicts no longer declining

    The trend toward fewer conflicts reported by peace researchers since the early 1990s now seems to have been broken. This is shown in the latest annual report “States in Armed Conflict,” from the Uppsala Conflict Data Program at the Uppsala University Department of Peace and Conflict Research. The findings worry the researchers. The Middle East is the region where peace initiatives are most conspicuous in their absence.

    Read more at the University of Uppsala…

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      December 27, 2007 | 6:12 AM Comments  0 comments



      The assassination of Benazir Bhutto

      Given the volume of commentary from bloggers throughout the world about the assassination of ex-prime minister of Pakistan, Benazir Bhutto, earlier today in Rawalpindi, Global Voices has set up a Special Coverage page aggregating some of the reactions from Pakistan and other parts of south Asia, as well as their own coverage on Global Voices. Visit the special coverage page for regular updates.

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        December 27, 2007 | 5:12 AM Comments  0 comments



        2007 - An Overview off the paved paths

        In line with the traditions of most magazines and newspapers, I have compiled my own ‘great moments’, photographs, lovely magazines, music, big trends, iconic people, etc.

        2007 was the year of the Sustainable Breakthrough, of Al Gore, the IPCC and their Nobel Peace Prize, of Sarkozy, Chávez and Ahmadinejad, of weather extremes (again), of droughts and hurricanes, of China ’s continuing breakthrough as economic superpower and major pollutor, of ‘good governance in Africa‘ being rewarded by Mo Ibrahim, (yet another) year of the online social networks breakthrough (Facebook, MySpace, Hyves, LinkedIn, YouTube).

        Clearly, 2007 has been a year of further blurring border between a country’s domestic and foreign policy, and a year which showed a stronger link between (inter) national security, conflicts and climate change.

        2007 saw the rise and blossoming of some great magazines, which have become my ‘close friends’:

        1. MONOCLE, clearly one of the best magazines ever…

        2. The Broker - a fresh, newly emerged professional magazine in the field of international development sciences.

        3. COLORS - although a relatively old magazine, this year’s issue about Vörland was just lovely, with stunning photographs (as always), bright stories and inspiring quotes…

        4. Intelligent Life (by The Economist) - new to me, but lovely to read…

        5. The Economist, December 8 issue (thanks to TIME), with a great cover photograph & design

        And here are 7 (to my opinion) great books which were published in 2007:

        1. Worldchanging: A User’s Guide for the 21st Century (Alex Steffen et al.)
        2. The Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest Countries are Failing and What Can Be Done About It (Paul Collier)
        3. The White Man’s Burden: Why the West’s Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good (William Easterly)
        4. Beyond Terror: The Truth About the Real Threats to Our World (Chris Abbott) (or the Dutch translation: Het Kleine Boek van de Grote Bedreigingen voor onze wereld!)
        5. The Shock Doctrine, The Rise of Disaster Capitalism (Naomi Klein)
        6. Het Zijn Net Mensen (in Dutch, by Joris Luyendijk, NRC’s former Middle East correspondent)
        7. A Thousand Splendid Suns (Kaled Hosseini)

        Anothercompany also has an overview of ‘the best of 2007‘ ; or read The Economist’s The World in 2008

        But what will 2008 bring?

        • 2008 will bring the highly controversial but most probably successfull Olympic Games in Beijing

        • 2008 will bring the end of charity and the start of a more ‘holistic’ consciousness about and approach to foreign aid, international trade andmultilateral activity.

        • On other hand, 2008 will also bring a stronger division between the liberal world and nationalist non-western countries in trade, politics, religion and culture, creating a seemlingly ‘classical’ division of the ‘Clash of Civilizations’, but unique in its multipolar characteristics of our time, eventually culminating in wars which will be largely about about the ‘blue gold’ (water) rather than oil.

        • 2008 will be a year in which the majority of the population lives in (mega)cities.

        • 2008 will bring about new cultural and religious wars (according to The Economist).

        • 2008 will probably bring even more tension and an expexted increasing ‘apartheid’ in the division of governance over climate change;

        • 2008 will bring a new peacebuilding mission (UNAMID) to Darfur.

        • 2008 will be the beginning of the Himalayas running dry, fuelling Chinese economy

        • 2008 will put the pressure of an increasing European energy demand on Africa.

        • 2008 will bring a new president in Russia.

        • and not to forget… 2008 will eventually bring the US a new president, probably in its heaviest time in 60 years (a huge - and counting - spending on the Iraq war, a growing budget and trade deficit, a looming credit crisis van falling dollar, a growing pressure to cooperate in global climate goverance, etc.)

        A ‘bright’ image for 2008…?

        Best wishes for a colourful and international 2008!

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          December 26, 2007 | 6:12 AM Comments  0 comments



          No more charity, please!

          Charity is in. Bill Clinton has written a bestseller about it and rock stars are organizing concerts. But Moniek Zegers, co-founder of the recently launched Dutch Comité tegen Goede Doelen Gekte (”Committee against good-cause lunacy”) says we shouldn’t be giving more but taking less. Read more in Ode Magazine…

          Global Info (in Dutch) published a short article about it,  and Fm Magazine hosted an interview with Ego de Bruijn.

          Intelligent Life (from the Economist) published an interesting article in the same realm (’A share of this article goes to charity’) , which questions the effectives of ‘helping Africa by buying t-shirts or the right sort of coffee’.

          Are we really acting that bad, or is the world just filled up with stereotypes of the wrong kind…?

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            December 23, 2007 | 7:12 AM Comments  0 comments



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