The hypocrisy of an award recognizing scientists whose work has improved the “quality of life” being named after the leader of one of the worst-governed nations on earth is galling.
Archive for May, 2010
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Posted in: Africa, Governance & Accountability, Justice
Topics: anticorruption, Equatorial Guinea, Erica Razook, obiang, unesco
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In light of the enormous environmental catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico, it may be worthwhile to revisit a few our discussions with experts on how oil economies operate, the distortions of power oil wealth introduces, and the future of oil as an energy source.
Posted in: Africa, Asia, Governance & Accountability, United States
Topics: Brock Boddie, Central Asia, Ed Kashi, energy, natural resources, Niger Delta, oil, photography, transparency
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Stanley Ibe of the Open Society Justice Initiative discusses the shocking, widespread levels of torture, rape, and murder at the hands of police in Nigeria, and what can be done about it.
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Drug policy is a first-order issue in Colombia. Economist and drug policy expert Daniel Mejia discusses how the issue figures in the upcoming presidential election there.
Posted in: Governance & Accountability, Justice, Latin America & the Caribbean, United States
Topics: Alexandra Kirby, Colombia, drug policy, war on drugs
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Can the United States afford to agree to an OSCE summit in Kazakhstan while Evgeniy Zhovtis, that country’s leading human rights activist, sits in prison?
Posted in: Asia, Europe, Governance & Accountability, Justice
Topics: Evgeniy Zhovtis, human rights, Jeff Goldstein, Kazkahstan, OSCE
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Lawyer, journalist, and Open Society Institute fellow Amy Bach has been honored for her book investigating the chronic failings of a profoundly dysfunctional U.S. criminal justice system.
Posted in: Justice, United States
Topics: Adam Culbreath, Amy Bach, criminal justice, Soros Justice Fellowship
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Kazakhstani civil society activists argue that progress in human rights, media independence, freedom of assembly, and access to justice falls short of promises made by the Kazakhstani government prior to taking up the OSCE chairmanship. They are urging the European Union to use "friendly criticism"...
Posted in: Asia, Europe, Governance & Accountability
Topics: European Union, Evgeniy Zhovtis, human rights, Jacqueline Hale, Kazakhstan, OSCE, torture
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Whether it's Afghanistan or Colombia, drug-producing countries face similar challenges: severe control policies push communities deeper into poverty, worsen conflicts, cause rights violations, uproot people, and damage the environment. Experts are calling for a fresh approach that involves the...
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In Pakistan, a country where roughly a quarter of all children do not attend school, education was recently made a fundamental right. But will that right translate into a reality?
Posted in: Asia, Education & Youth, Rights & Equality
Topics: Faisal Bari, Pakistan
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Despite laws protecting Georgia's Borjomi-Kharagauli National Park and its environs, the land's pristine beauty recently came under threat by an electricity project. It took a coordinated effort by civil society to protect the park.
Posted in: Europe, Governance & Accountability
Topics: Anuka Toklikishvili, Borjomi-Kharagauli, Caucasus, Electricity, Georgia, national parks, natural resources, transparency