Posted on December 10, 2017. Tags: 16 Days of Activism, Africa, CEDAW, Corruption, Culture, Democracy, Europe, gender, Globalization, Human Rights, Justice for Women, Middle East, Politics, She Can, UN, United Kingdom, United States, UNWomen, Violence Against Women, Women, Women's Rights, World
The television adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ has gripped viewers and political pundits alike, since its release in April 2017, for its astonishingly realistic parallels between the fictional world of Gilead, and the very real Donald Trump led USA. As the global campaign for 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence draws to […]
Read the full story
Posted in Culture, Global Economy, Security Issues, UN, World
Posted on September 30, 2015. Tags: Beijing, China, Culture, Hillary Clinton, Human Rights, UN, Washington, Women's Rights, Xi Jinping
By Jonathan Zimmerman, professor of education and history at NYU Last Sunday, at the United Nations, world leaders marked the 20th anniversary of the landmark Beijing accord on women’s rights. They celebrated women’s progress—especially in education, health, and labor—and underscored ongoing gender inequalities. But they also condemned the jailing of female political dissidents in China, which […]
Read the full story
Posted in China, Religion, UN, World
Posted on July 2, 2016. Tags: Art, Censorship, Control, Corruption, Creatives, Culture, Democracy, Erdogan, Expression, FIlm, Free Speech, Freedom, Human Rights, Istanbul, Kurds, Music, Politics, Press, Turkey
Turkey has a history of strict censorship which still remains a prominent issue in modern day Istanbul and shows no signs of stopping anytime soon. Media censorship is at an all time high with 140 press censorship cases already known in the country, newspapers have been shut down and journalists imprisoned. Now censorship is spreading to the […]
Read the full story
Posted in Culture, Europe, Middle East, Political Security, Turkey, World
Posted on July 11, 2012. Tags: Africa, Culture, Iran, Mohammed Mossadegh, Richard Nixon, U.S. Foreign Policy, United States
“It is reasonable to argue that but for the coup, Iran would be a mature democracy. So traumatic was the coup’s legacy that when the Shah finally departed in 1979, many Iranians feared a repetition of 1953, which was one of the motivations for the student seizure of the U.S. Embassy. The hostage crisis, in […]
Read the full story
Posted in Africa, Culture, Europe, Middle East, Security Issues, World
Posted on January 29, 2017. Tags: Africa, Crime, Culture, Dominic Ongwen, Global Justice, Human Rights, ICC, International Law, Law, LRA, Politics, Social Justice, Uganda, World
The International Criminal Court and its perception of justice being achieved through trial, conviction and imprisonment shows a notion of retributive justice, a notion that may have limited effectiveness in the context of Uganda and the case of Dominic Ongwen. With the trial of former Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) Commander Dominic Ongwen currently ongoing, the […]
Read the full story
Posted in Africa, Conflict, World
Posted on January 25, 2015. Tags: Afghanistan, Aid, Al Qaeda, Counter-terrorism, Culture, development, Enlightenment, Human, Humanitarian, Iraq, IS, ISIL, ISIS, Islam, Islamic State, Military, Modernity, Philosophy, Politics, Poverty, rights, Taliban, Terrorism, UN, World
Why are humanitarian workers targeted? On World Humanitarian Day this year the United Nations reported that in various conflict zones in 2013, 155 aid workers were killed, 171 were injured and 134 were taken as captives. We have to ask, what is the justification for such acts? Let us begin with the illegal occupation of […]
Read the full story
Posted in Humanitarian Intervention, Iraq, Islam, Middle East, Religion, Security Issues, Syria, Terrorism, UN, World