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January 10, 2012

Africa


Opportunity to End Al-Bashir Rule in Sudan?
Hamid Eltgani Ali

A promising African country is decimated by wars, violence, and lack of individual liberties. President Omar Al-Bashir, who elected himself multiple times through fraudulent and farcical elections, has ruled the country with an iron fist and explosive violence for more than two decades. But the county is revolting, from its peripheries. Read More


Governing a World with HIV and AIDS
Alex de Waal

The pandemic is not out of the danger zone, but apocalyptic predictions about the collapse of armies, state crises, and a vicious interaction between HIV/AIDS and violent conflict -- especially in Africa -- have not come to pass. Careful analysis gives far less cause for pessimism than many imagined would be possible even half a decade ago.Read More


The Climate Change Challenge
Mostafa K. Tolba

The results of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Cancun proved once again that nations are not serious about addressing the danger posed by global warming. Non-stop consultations between developed and developing countries must achieve tangible and effective compromises before the follow-up conference in Durban in November.Read More


Nelson Mandela’s Legacy
John Carlin

What the world must learn from one of our greatest leaders Read More


Polokwane and Beyond: The Struggle for Wealth and Power in the new South Africa
Nicholas Borain

After Apartheid: Reinventing South Africa? Edited by Ian Shapiro and Kahreen Tebeau. University of Virginia Press, 2011. 368 pp.Read More


The Cairo Review Interview: South Africa’s Clout
Scott MacLeod

President Jacob Zuma presides over a country that after decades of international isolation under white minority rule is taking an increasing role in African and global affairs. Read More


An Emerging New World Order
Pravin Gordhan

How the rise of developing economies–exemplified by BRICS– is changing the old way of doing business Read More


How to Fix U.S.-Pakistan Relations
Ty McCormick

U.S. relations with Pakistan have been on the rocks since Navy SEALs buzzed into Abbottabad unannounced in a pair of modified MH-60 helicopters and took out Osama bin Laden. The move, which 68 percent of Pakistanis viewed as a “severe” compromise of their country’s sovereignty, according to a Gallup poll, prompted the humiliated Pakistani military to expel U.S. military trainers from the country and refuse visas to other American personnelRead More


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