Saturday 31 December 2011

The Arab Spring of Discontent

Not since the collapse of the Berlin wall and the demise of the Soviet Union has change swept so suddenly across a geographical region.

Written as events unfolded, this collection of articles offers insightful and diverse perspectives on the Arab uprising, and expands to consider related political unrest outside the predominantly Arab world, such as in Iran.

This collection should be of considerable interest to students of international relations, particularly those with an interest in the politics of the Middle East and North Africa. It should also be of intrigue to those with an eagerness to examine the conceptual issues of social change, political protest and humanitarian intervention.
http://www.e-ir.info/wp-content/uploads/arab-spring-collection-e-IR.pdf 

Science Across Virtual Institutes (SAVI)

Science Across Virtual Institutes (SAVI) is an innovative concept to foster interaction among scientists, engineers and educators around the globe. It is based on the knowledge that excellence in STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) research and education exists in many parts of the world, and that scientific advances can be accelerated by scientists and engineers working together across international borders. Virtual institutes that connect researchers with common interests and goals will have a great impact on solving important societal challenges.

SAVI is a program initiated by the U.S. National Science Foundation under the Obama administration.
http://www.nsf.gov/news/special_reports/savi/index.jsp
 

Immigration and the Diffusion of Technology

This paper analyzes long-term effects of skilled-worker immigration on productivity for the Huguenots migration to Prussia. The authors combine Huguenot immigration lists from 1700 with Prussian firm-level data on the value of inputs and outputs in 1802 in a unique data base. In 1685, religious persecution drove highly skilled Huguenots out of France into backward Brandenburg-Prussia where they were channeled into towns to compensate population losses due to plagues during the Thirty Years’ War. Exploiting this settlement pattern in an instrumental-variable approach, the authors still find causal effects of Huguenot settlement on the productivity of textile manufactories hundred years after their immigration. http://www.cesifo-group.de/portal/pls/portal/docs/1/1210563.PDF 

Delivering Solutions: Advancing Dialogue to Improve Maternal Health

Published in December of 2011, "Delivering Solutions" captures, analyzes, and synthesizes the strategies and recommendations that emerged from the the Woodrow Wilson Center’s 2009-2011 "Advancing Dialogue on Maternal Health" series. http://www.wilsoncenter.org/sites/default/files/Deliverying%20Solutions%20for%20Maternal%20Health%20Report.pdf 

International Migration Outlook 2011

This publication constitutes the thirty-fifth report of the OECD’s Continuous Reporting System on Migration (known by its French acronym SOPEMI). Part I contains three subsections. The first of these provides a broad overview of recent trends in international migration flows, both temporary and permanent.This year’s edition pays special attention to migration of service providers and intra-corporate transfers, which are both gaining importance.

The movement of international students is also examined.The second section of Part I takes a close look at the impact of the economic crisis on the employment situation of immigrants.The final section of Part I highlights major changes in migration policy.Parts II and III are devoted to special topics. The first one examines migrant entrepreneurship in OECD countries and its contribution to employment creation. The second special chapter on international migration to Israel, is part of a series which looks at international migration in new OECD member countries and large emerging economies. Part IV presents succinct country-specific notes and statistics on developments in international migration movements and policies in OECD countries in recent years. http://www.wiso.uni-hamburg.de/fileadmin/vwl/aussenhandel/internationalewirtschaftsbeziehungen/Hauptstudium/Migration/WiSe2011_12/oecd_2011.pdf 

Reflecting on 2011: Opportunities in Sport and Development

The field of sport of development continues to grow and so have the opportunities to become involved. sportanddev takes a look at opportunities which have been posted on the Platform during 2011. When looking back what is immediately evident is both an increase in the variety and number of opportunities for people to get involved. http://www.sportanddev.org/?3903/Reflecting-on-opportunities-in-Sport--Development 

Social Protection, Efficiency and Growth

Social protection can play an important role in poverty reduction and making growth inclusive of the poor. At times, it is also argued that social protection can directly contribute to growth and economic efficiency. The paper revisits the evidence on the cost of social protection to reduce poverty, and its contribution to efficiency and growth. The paper ends with three areas where there could be potentially high growth impacts: social protection focusing on children, especially before the age of five; social protection measures to make migration smoother and cities more attractive places to live for low skilled workers, possibly via urban workfare schemes focusing on urban community asset building; and social protection targeted at adolescents and young adults, including transfers conditional on training focused on urban labor market transitions. http://www.csae.ox.ac.uk/workingpapers/pdfs/csae-wps-2011-17.pdf 

Trade Preferences for Environmentally Friendly Goods and Services

International trade in environmental goods and services (EGS) may contribute to the achievement of environmental, economic and developmental benefits and to the transition towards a “green economy”. The international community has been exploring several strategies to promote sustainable development through enhanced trade in EGS. One key question remains how to maximise the sustainable benefits of trade liberalization and market creation/expansion of EGS for developing countries. This paper seeks to explore the possible role of trade preferences for EGS in promoting the transition towards a “green economy”, focusing on potential beneficial effects for developing countries.

The Financial Development Report 2011

Hong Kong SAR overtakes the United States and the United Kingdom to top the World Economic Forum’s fourth annual Financial Development Report. As the first Asian financial centre to achieve this rank, Hong Kong’s position was bolstered by strong scores in non-banking financial services such as IPO activity and insurance.

Although it fell one spot to 2nd place, the United States’ overall score remains almost unchanged compared to last year. While financial stability continues to be a concern, the US was able to offset this weakness with strong financial intermediation results.
http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_FinancialDevelopmentReport_2011.pdf 

ICT for Environmental Sustainability

This report presents a VTT roadmap on ICT for environmental sustainability, based on the assessments and evaluations made by VTT technology experts. The roadmap is divided into three themes. Empowering people means using ICT to raise people’s awareness of the environmental impact of their actions and to channel their behavior in a more environmentally-friendly direction. Extending natural resources involves reducing the use of diverse environmentally unsustainable re-sources through ICT-based solutions. Optimising systems refers to minimizing the environmental load of diverse systems by optimising their operation. As a synthesis, four focal topics have been identified within the roadmap themes that are most promising for further investigation. These are: 1) environmentally sustainable consumption, 2) smart energy and buildings, 3) lifecycle efficient production, and 4) optimised and adaptive networks. http://www.vtt.fi/inf/pdf/tiedotteet/2010/T2532.pdf 

Busan High-Level Forum: From Dead Aid to Better Development?

The Busan High-Level Forum (HLF)—which met from November 29 to December 1 and involved more than three thousand delegates from nearly one hundred sixty countries as well as representatives from international and civil society organizations, businesses, and foundations—agreed to establish a new development architecture. The forum was originally convened to evaluate the progress made since the adoption of the Paris Declaration for Aid Effectiveness in 2005. However, unprecedentedly broad participation made the HLF a truly universal gathering of traditional and emerging donors. This breadth of participation resulted in a compromise that goes beyond aid effectiveness to establish a new framework for development cooperation. http://www.cfr.org/south-korea/busan-high-level-forum-dead-aid-better-development/p26790 

EAST AFRICA REGIONAL INTEGRATION NEED TO RE-EXAMINE THE STRATEGY

 
REGIONAL INTEGRATION IN EAST AFRICA
NEED TO RE-EXAMINE THE INTEGRATION STARTEGY
(A paper presented at the First Summit of the Tanzania Professional Network, held at the Mlimani City, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzaniaon 04 December 2011).

It is a great pleasure for me to participate in this very First Professional Summit, especially at a time when Tanzania and some of the other African countries are celebrating 50 years of independence ( politically that is?). I have been requested to make a presentation on “Regional integration: Equitable distribution of resources and opportunities in Education, Trade, Media and Employment.” I changed the topic a bit because I do not believe a regional integration arrangement should ever have the power to manage regional resources, opportunities in education, trade, media and employment, however, successful such an arrangementis.

My responsibility today is to share with you some thoughts on regional integration and the integration model the East African Countries have adopted.I reckon, that I was requested to make a presentation on regional integration because of my 10.5 years’ experience as the Director for Legal and Institutional Affairs of the Preferential Trade Area whichlater became the Common Market forEastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) comprising 25 member countries in Eastern and Southern African region. The COMESA Treaty,which is substantially the same as the Treaty Establishing the East African Community, was largely drafted under my leadership with drafting experts from the member states over a period of over 2 years.

HISTORY OF REGIONAL INTERGRATION IN AFRICA
Regional economic integration has a relatively recent history in Africa goingback to the 1970s and 1980s. The arrangements, then, (the East African Community) were based on a muchlauded but failed strategy of import substitution industrialization. Tanzania is the only country that implemented the strategy, at the national level, more enthusiastically.The result was disastrous. The Tanzanian national economy became captive to poor quality but expensive goods produced locally from clothes to bread to soaps to building materials to the whole of our lives!! One has to have lived through it to understand the price we paid for import substitution. This was not helped by the fact that the state was also the main investor often with monopolies in most economic activities. There was no competition. The people had nowhere else to go for their daily requirements.

At the regional level industrialization was mechanically allocated amongst the member states and investments were by the states and the focus was for the industries to source materials locally.Import substitution, was a very inward- looking strategy that failed miserably at both levels.

Thefailure of the strategy was attributed to poor implementation, monopolies at national levels, overvalued currencies, small markets etc.Lolette, Kritzinger, Senior economist, World Bank Country office in S.A writing on regional integration, Concepts, Advantages, Disadvantages and Lessons of Experience, concluded that the inward-looking regional strategy failed for the same reasons as the underlying national import-substitution policies. The reason whythe import substitution industrialization strategy failed was purely economic. The strategy did not make any commercial sense.

Frankly speaking, the experience of regional integration arrangements in Europe, Latin America, Africa, and East Africa is not encouraging. The integration model of Europe which the arrangements in Africa and, in particular, East Africa have imitated is, essentially, undemocratic in structure and in practice and unnecessarily costly. Regional decisions have to take timeand, as such, the structure is unsuited to the electronic age where decisions have to be made instantly. The East African Community model is similar to that of the European Union without theEast African member states having the sameability to fund the project or the frequent meetings that must take place for regionaldecisions to be taken.

The African position is further complicated by un-excusable multiple memberships in similar regional arrangements within the same sub-regions. For instance, Tanzania is a member of SADC as well as East African Community. Kenya is a member of COMESA, East African Community as well as IGAD. Uganda is a member of COMESA and East African Community. The same applies to Burundi and Rwanda.This erodes any confidence the public might have that the governments are serious about regional integration.

THE EAST AFRICAN INTEGRATION MODEL
The implementation of the East African regional integration model, so far, is  at the regional level particularly fast and deep from common market to monetary union and political federation without  achievements to match the stages and without any measurable minimum thresholds of macro-economic targets or fiscal discipline or budgetary limits adopted to have  to have been achieved.



At the internal member state level, the national markets integrated are far from being integrated.  For instance, the Tanzanian market is not a nationally integratedmarket; it is divided into more than 300 small local government areas in which to operate in any one of them requires a separate license and business registration.  At the Union level, the Zanzibar market is a separate market from the Tanzania Mainland market.  The markets in the other East African markets arenot fully open. One needs to open up the national markets from within as well as physically link the member states by roads, rail, telecommunications etc. to open up the regional markets between the member states.In any case, open national markets and linked national markets to each other in the region would be a pre-requisite for the kind of regional integration provided in the Treaty.However, such physical links would be needed even if East Africa opted to practice regional integration pragmatically-forthe recommended regional cooperation and coordinationimplementation strategy instead of the strategy in place.

The East African regional integration arrangementhas the objective of creating a common market, customs union, a single market, single currency and political federationgradually.Implementation of the treaty gradually would have started with integrating the markets first, build roads, railways and related infrastructure before moving to customs union, single market, single currency and political union.

If the Treaty was implemented gradually carrying the will of its people with it, East Africa would not move beyond the pragmatic stage of cooperation and coordination for decades or forever. Member states would simply have adopted harmonized macro- economic policies, building infrastructure to physically link the countries, adopt common environmental policies, agree on heavier investment in education and health and we would negotiate as a region in international trade negotiations. We would not have moved to integrate the economies, create monetary union, fiscal union, common currency or political union mechanically.

For some reason, however, there are politicians and other zealots who wish to accelerate the process to start with the end-namely a federation and a political union.It is the first regional integration arrangement in the world to be implemented in reverse.  Those who are pushing for fast tracking the process are ahead of the democratic will of the people, if not in the whole of East Africa, then certainly in Tanzania. In excess of 75% of Tanzanians opposed fast tracking the process.


Already preparation are in process for passing east African regional laws to replace national laws in important key aspects of the economic, monetary and fiscal policies as well as social behavior, social life, employment, which will effectively transfer national sovereigntyto a regional government made up of unelected regional executiveswho thendecide when the time is right to move from one stage to the next higher stageoften without any reference back to the electorate. This is what is happened and is happening in Europe and it is what is happening in East Africa!

The East African regional integration model requires that member states trade more closely amongst themselves and invest more within the group but also become one- economically and politically!  That is a tall order given that intra-member state trade is below 5% and even that cannot be attributed to regional integration. If you are heavily dependent on commodities or produce largely the same goods,  or produce those goods too costly relatively there is little incentive to trade intra regionally, as the low tariffs  offered  regionally are offset by lower production cost in countries afar, such as in China, Vietnam, Cambodia etc. The world should bethemarket for East Africa and not merely the region. That is where our focus should be. The electronic age has helped make it easier to trade globally rather than locally or regionally.

The electronic age also requires countries to decide faster on economic, monetary and fiscal issues at an electronic speed which the regional integration model reflected in the establishing treaty does not provide.
LOST DECADES
East Africa has lost decades by not consistently implementing economic reforms that make it easier to do business for both domestic and foreign investments. Hard hit are foreign investments which are reflected in the low rate of direct investment flows of about 2%of the world’s foreign direct investment into Africa. Foreign direct investments are needed in higher rates if Africa, East Africa is to grow its economy beyond the average of 5% percent of GDP. 

Africa generally and, in particular, East Africa haslow rates of domestic saving relative to GDP of between 10-15% of GDP (the same applies to Tanzania), which confirms the observation that the demand for investment in order to achieve the levels of growth rates high enough to reduce poverty is very high and that such demand cannot be met through domestic investment alone. 

Economic reforms in Africa have yielded economic growth. LoletteKritzinger, Senior Economist, World Bank Country Office in S.A, in 2003, 16 African countries achieved an average economic growth rate of 3%, 16 countries growth of 3-5% and 18 countries more than 5%. Tanzania fell in the 18 countries category of more than5% growth rate. The position has not changed much since then.However, the above economic growth rates have not grown high enough to bring about substantial reduction to the widespread poverty existing in the region.

Most African governments, East African governments included, recoil back, and allow nationalism to dominate, make it difficult for foreign investments to grow to augment domestic investments when faced with the expected negative impact of reforms. This leads to less foreign investment flowing into their countries and erodes investor confidence. Less volumes of investment lead to less growth which leads to more poverty and into more reform policy reversal.I believe there is no way to reducing poverty than growing the economy and the economy cannot grow unless there is constant growth in private investment both domestic and foreign but especially foreign.

 Investment in human capital development is equally key to any economic growth.  Africa, and, in particular, East Africa, has consistently underinvested in its human capital development relative to the levels required. Underinvestment in human capital development has led to East Africa’s single most weaknesses- namely the lack of capacity to provide efficient public services, develop practical development strategy and manage the economy efficiently. The result is clear for all to see; Africa (the same applies to East Africa) has not been able to integrate into the world economy in a way in which it could have todrawfrom the benefits of globalization which would have increased its resources to productive investment.
WHY ASIA GOT IT RIGHT
The Asian region has succeeded economically despite the lack of deepened economic integration of their economies. They succeeded becausethey adopted pragmatic economic policies, invested heavily in human capital development and curved out a niche (export led economic strategy) in the world economy at a time when that was a viable strategy and are quick to correct imperfections of their reforms.

The Asian region did not spend years integrating their economies, monetary and fiscal policies or formed a political union within their region. They invested in integrating into the world economy in a manner in which they benefited out of it. They took a more cost effective approach to regional cooperation.


WHERE DOES THIS LEAVE US IN EAST AFRICA?
My advice is: There is no need to amend the Treaty Establishing the East African Community. Just implement the East African Community treatypragmatically and gradually but not fully. Start with integrating the market with things that can be implemented regionally practically; such as roads, railways, environment, macro- policies, and trade negotiations etc.Cooperate and coordinate things that are best implemented together. Untimely advice given that the East African leaders have already signed us all into a federation!!!

East Africa is not yet ready and should not be ready for a single currency, monetary union, fiscal union or a fast tracked federation.The necessary economic achievements and fiscal targets are absent. The East African Community isinto a fast tracked federation on EMPTYand without the East African population behind it.

CONCLUSION
The political leaders should be persuaded to slow down the integration process and relate the stages to realities on the ground. Most importantly no deeper integration should be committed by any member state, in particular Tanzania, thattransferspower to the Community on monetary and fiscal policywithout consulting the people ina referendum. If consulted, the people of East Africawill not accept what the Community is pushing us to do. This article is personal.
By
Dr. Eve HawaSinare
REXATTORNEYS

Mapping Population and Climate Change

Mapping Population and Climate Change


This updated guide to Population Action International’s mapping website shows how climate change and population dynamics will change the world over time. High rates of population growth and climate change consequences overlap in many countries. Interactive maps illustrate how climate change impacts, demographic trends and the need for contraception are likely to affect countries’ abilities to adapt to climate change. In addition to global maps, the guide provides examples of maps and images from the website’s new country profiles, which explore population and climate change issues in Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Nepal, and Peru.
http://www.populationaction.org/Publications/Policy_and_Issue_Brief/Mapping_Population_and_Climate_Change/mapping_climate_change.pdf 

Empty Handed Advocacy Guide

Empty Handed tells the story of women’s lack of access to reproductive health supplies in sub-Saharan Africa, and its impact on their lives. The film documents the challenges at each level of the supply chain and identifies key areas for improvement. Empty Handed aims to provoke discussion and mobilize support for reproductive health supplies.
http://www.populationaction.org/Publications/Advocacy_Guide/Empty_Handed_Advocacy_Guide/Empty_Handed_Advocacy_Guide_2.pdf 

Saudi Arabia in the New Middle East

The United States' relationship with Saudi Arabia has been one of the cornerstones of U.S. policy in the Middle East for decades. Despite their substantial differences in history, culture, and governance, the two countries have generally agreed on important political and economic issues and have often relied on each other to secure mutual aims. The 1990-91 Gulf War is perhaps the most obvious example, but their ongoing cooperation on maintaining regional stability, moderating the global oil market, and pursuing terrorists should not be downplayed. http://i.cfr.org/content/publications/attachments/Saudi_Arabia_CSR63.pdf 

Environmental Migration: Policy Gaps and Response Strategies

By 2050, 25 million to 1 billion people are expected to be migrating due to environmental factors. Though examining linkages between environmental conditions and migration have been on the international agenda at least since 1992, only in recent years have they become better understood. It is clear today that the environment and environmental change impact migration. They do this by influencing the socioeconomic, political, and cultural drivers that lead people to move.

This issue brief by Chris Perry, following up on a policy forum hosted by the International Peace Institute on October 24, 2011, examines the links between climate change and migration and identifies gaps in the current international policy and legal frameworks for dealing with environmentally displaced persons.
http://www.ipinst.org/media/pdf/publications/ipi_e_pub_env_migration.pdf 

Multilateral Strategies for Conflict Prevention

This meeting report presents a synthesis of discussions of these questions that took place during the sixteenth New York Seminar on May 4-6, 2011. It also summarizes key recommendations made by participants at the meeting.

The report finds:
  • Multilateral conflict prevention has undergone significant change in recent years.
  • Capabilities, working methods, and the normative framework for multilateral conflict prevention have evolved considerably in response to greater receptiveness by many states facing conflict risks and increasing preparedness by third parties to engage in preventive diplomacy and structural prevention.
  • This trend has been accompanied by a proliferation of the number of third states, international organizations and nongovernmental organizations undertaking preventive action.
  • Achieving coordination and coherence among these numerous third parties in their pursuit of preventive goals constitutes a critical challenge.
http://www.ipinst.org/media/pdf/publications/epub_conflictprevention_dec2011.pdf 

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2011 in Culture: A Pillar for Sustainable Development

2011 was a time for celebrating past accomplishments while affirming UNESCO’s global leadership in promoting the role of culture for sustainable development through international advocacy, reinforced standard-setting and operational activities. http://www.unesco.org/new/en/culture/themes/single-view/news/2011_in_culture/ 

The false promise of Aid for Trade

Aid for Trade (AfT) has gained prominence as an innovative form of donor support in the era of the ‘post’-Washington Consensus.This article, however, through critical analysis of AfT discourse within the ‘moral economies’ of multilateral WTO and bilateral EU-ACP (African, Caribbean and Pacific) negotiations, points to the strategic purposes of donor language in rationalising asymmetric North-South trade systems. Moreover, it questions the ‘development’ credentials of AfT assistance, given its disbursement to strategically significant middle-income states in relation to Western overseas interventions, private sector activities that have dubious consequences for supposed beneficiaries, and the tying of AfT disbursements to the implementation of inappropriate policies. http://www.bwpi.manchester.ac.uk/resources/Working-Papers/bwpi-wp-16011.pdf 

MDG Gap Task Force Report 2011: The Global Partnership for Development: Time to Deliver

There report reveals that significant gaps remain in delivering on the commitments in the areas of aid, trade, debt relief, and access to new technologies and to affordable essential medicines. A number of crucial commitments that were supposed to have been reached by 2010, including increased aid volume, improved aid effectiveness, and the conclusion of the Doha Round of trade negotiations, have not been met. http://www.un.org/en/development/desa/policy/mdg_gap/mdg_gap2011/mdg8report2011_engw.pdf 

Friday 23 December 2011

The Arab Spring of Discontent

Not since the collapse of the Berlin wall and the demise of the Soviet Union has change swept so suddenly across a geographical region.

Written as events unfolded, this collection of articles offers insightful and diverse perspectives on the Arab uprising, and expands to consider related political unrest outside the predominantly Arab world, such as in Iran.

This collection should be of considerable interest to students of international relations, particularly those with an interest in the politics of the Middle East and North Africa. It should also be of intrigue to those with an eagerness to examine the conceptual issues of social change, political protest and humanitarian intervention.
http://www.e-ir.info/wp-content/uploads/arab-spring-collection-e-IR.pdf 

Thursday 22 December 2011

Besigye remains the best ‘Chocolate’ in a x-mas box and Otunu Shouldn’t fire all his enemies

Friends,
Most of the NRM mobilizers will be relieved when Besigye retires from FDC leadership because he still remains the best ‘chocolate’ in a box. Love or hate him, he is the most courageous, toughest and principled politician in Uganda history. The guy is undoubtedly the best opposition politician in Uganda’s history. He’s the best at what he does. When he talks on politics, he usually has been worth listening to more than any other FDC politician. Historians and political analysts will write endless books about him. The only thing missing in his political life is becoming the president of Uganda which he almost did in 2006 if Dr.Badru Kiggunud’s EC were not cowards. They reportedly allowed themselves to be intimidated but most political observers ‘believe’ that Besigye won those elections.

Museveni only outsmarted him in elections and I think this is the reason why he wants to retire, not forgetting the famous Gilbert Arinaitwe who liked playing with Besigye’s head using tear gas. What makes Museveni to stand out is that he thinks 10 moves ahead when it comes to rigging elections, and he planned for the presidency for a long time. The rest of the opposition leaders think two moves, and are proud of it. Museveni is probably the best politician of his generation in Uganda- at least of his NRM party; even Besigye would have to agree.

As for UPC, the way there are treating Dr. Otunu now has made me feel the slightest for them. He does not deserve to be treated this way just because he is not a Langi or related to late Obote. The smears his political enemies are now flinging mark them, not him, as beneath contempt.
Olara Otunu is the current UPC president
It’s good that Otunu has fired some of the UPC ‘rebels’ especially David Pulkol and Rurangaranga. The former chairman made it clear that that he will use whatever means necessary to incriminate the UPC president which was unacceptable. So he had to go. As for Pulkol, I have never trusted him even one little bit. He is one character that can give you a poisonous injection on the bum while feeding you a samosa at the same time. He was previously working for the Museveni intelligence system; then he moved to FDC temporarily before joining some funny political party I have forgotten. When Otunu came back, Pulkol went UPC mad with the famous bandwagon song of ‘we are coming back home’. Oh God, I couldn’t believe my eyes when I read in the paper that Otunu had given him an executive position in UPC.

Anyway, it’s good that Otunu has started learning Uganda’s complicated politics on a table very slowly. In Uganda, all surviving party leaders have been sleeping with one eye open. Otherwise, Otunu should copy some of Museveni’s ugly tactics to survive the current situation. If he doesn’t’ he is a goner not a ‘gunner’ (like Arsenal supporters). If he wants to know some of these tactics, he should freely consult me privately and I help him out, but I will charge him some fee because I need to buy presents for my daughters before the New Year. But overall, he seems to be catching up with the game.

Of course there is a limit to what Otunu can do since he is not as ‘executive’ as president Museveni. The later allegedly uses the intelligence organs and URA to obtain innuendo and political ammo against his enemies, and the police and army to harass his enemies, but otunu can do a little bit of Museveni’s tricks that are less than that to survive his enemies. USA’s Richard Nixon too used IRS to target his political enemies. Bill Clinton also reportedly used to keep files of his political enemies.

Nevertheless, I think Otunu should have kept Robert Kanusu in his team. I don’t know Kanusus personally but he seems to be a people’s person and a grass root politician. He should have won that election in Jinja if NRM had not resorted to Museveni’s ways of survival. If it is true that Kanusu too had also been comprised, Otunu should have deployed him somewhere else but kept him in his team, while at the same time keeping an eye on him. Otunu should know that not everybody in Museveni’s cabinet are his friends. In fact, he does not trust most of them. But he has got his boys that keep an eye on all of Museveni’s ministers. They are people in Museveni’s government whose job is to monitor the likes of Edward Ssekandi (VP), Saida Bumba(Gender ministry), even Mbabazi( PM), and others. The man allegedly keeps a file in his office on all his political enemies in and outside NRM. He uses them when very necessary.

Actually, if people had ears, they would not come out to publicly portray themselves as Museveni’s friends because the man has often said that his only friends are his wife and kids, and he is right. In Uganda politics, you don’t trust anyone if you want to survive for a long time. So, Otunu should forget about New York or UN politics and sort out the mess in UPC. He should not fire all his enemies as he is doing because some of them are better to be kept in the party while keeping an eye on them.

I would say it has more with keeping your friends close, but your enemies closer. For example, The Nazis and the Soviets were on opposite sides during the Spanish civil war. But why did Stalin and Hitler sign the Non-Aggression Pact on August 19, 1939? Why did they agree to the division of Poland and invaded it together? Meanwhile in the period just before that pact, Stalin had been warning all the British, the Americans, and the French that the Germans were getting to be dangerous. In addition there were elements of the German intelligence service that had been trying to work with British MI to assassinate Hitler. These German agents were ignored. The capitalists at that time thought that Nazi Germany would be a good bulwark against the Soviet Union.

Otherwise, let me take this opportunity to wish everyone a happy X-mas and new year. Besigye said recently while at Makerere University that 2012 is gonna be ‘bloody’. So, let’s keep our eyes on the ball.

Byebyo ebyange
Abbey Kibirige Semuwemba

An Economic Projection to 2050

This document describes economic baseline projections to 2050 for several world regions. It describes how socio-economic drivers are used to create a consistent projection of economic activity for the coming decades, applying the general framework of “conditional convergence”. This economic baseline is created using the ENV-Linkages model version 3. This baseline is used for modelling analysis with the ENVLinkages model as carried out for the OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050 (to be released in Spring 2012). Specific attention is given in this paper to projections for the energy system as part of the economy, to allow detailed links between economic activity and environmental pressures, including emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs). http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver/download/fulltext/5kg0ndkjvfhf.pdf?expires=1324458318&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=B5034633B65ADC9E375CC531D67EEDB0 

International Agreements for Commodity Price Stabilization

This paper looks at commodity stocks, their role in price determination for storable commodities, and past efforts of international stockholding arrangements with economic provisions in stabilizing world prices. Low stocks to use ratios of recent years were one of a number of contributory factors to the grain price spike in 2007-08, the paper finds. However, the experience with past international commodity agreements (ICAs) with price band provisions and stockholding obligations suggests that they had only limited success in reducing the volatility of the prices they set out to stabilize, as well as being prone to many other operational problems. The paper also suggests that as a possible response to apparently inadequate private storage, public sector storage would be costly, ineffective in countering price spikes once stocks are fully exhausted, and would crowd out private storage. Some market-based approaches to countering food price volatility are also examined as alternatives to commodity storage.
http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver/download/fulltext/5kg0ps7ds0jl.pdf?expires=1324460212&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=03982909F61F04C766D0330088EDCFCE 

Service Delivery for Sustainable Human Development

This report focuses on services offered in the agriculture, education, health, and water and sanitation sectors. As such, it touches on the basics of human well-being, which are fundamental to human development and respect for human life. The country’s low performance on the Human Development Index (HDI), despite a slight improvement to 0.395 in 2010 from below 0.35 in 2000, calls for an immediate and real shift in policy choices. This situation requires reform and recommitment by all public sector implementing agencies significantly concerned with each sector. A reorientation of focus with regard to public financial resources, particularly those allocated to health and education services, needs to address identified gaps so that most people can attain needed quality services. Furthermore, the private sector is called upon to act in bringing substantial benefits to the people of Zambia.
http://hdr.undp.org/en/reports/national/africa/zambia/NHDR_Zambia_2011_en.pdf
 

e-Government Capability Maturity Model

The Capability Maturity Model (CMM) and its Assessment Methodology provide a tool and methodol-ogy to assess the maturity of an organisation across a number of criteria at pre-sent time. The maturity represents the capability of an organisation to implement and sustainably operate an e-Government portfolio.
The document is to be used as a general reference, training reference and general reading for interested parties. However its main intent is the internal documentation of the tool and its usage. It is not designed to be published as a public document outside the tool usage or training. The content is written and structured in a way to support and facilitate the re-usage of the content in the to-be developed training materials and Online Platform.
http://www.unapcict.org/ecohub/e-government-capability-maturity-model 

Natural resources, corruption and trust: A complex relationship

Do natural resources reduce social trust? And if so, do natural resources have a direct effect on trust, or is their effect indirect through variables such as corruption? This issue paper reviews the literature on natural resources and on trust. The existing theoretical and empirical literature suggests that natural resources can reduce trust through several indirect mechanisms. Notably, studies show that natural resources lead to institutional degradation, corruption, inequality, and civil war, all of which have been associated with reduced trust. The paper tests empirically whether there is a direct effect of natural resources on trust (The Pearl Hypothesis), using cross-country data. The results indicate that no such direct effect exists, suggesting that any effect of resources on trust runs through intermediate variables such as institutions, corruption, inequality, and civil war. Importantly, however, the relationship between corruption and trust turns out to be non-linear, indicating that the effect of natural resources on trust depends on the initial corruption level of a country. http://www.cmi.no/publications/file/4316-natural-resources-corruption-and-trust.pdf 

Effective measures to build resilience in Africa to adapt to climate change

This policy brief, issued while Governments discuss how to adapt to climate change in Durban, reflects that African countries are committed and investing funds to reduce risk to floods and droughts, albeit too little and still insufficiently in development sectors. These findings are potentially important as they demonstrate the effectiveness of addressing disaster risk through public expenditures and contribute to discussions on financial models to address climate change.

This brief builds on the information provided by countries in their reports on progress in the implementation of the Hyogo Framework for Action. It also builds on the facts provided by the Special Report on Extreme Events of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC/SREX) and in particular the finding that ‘opportunities exist to create synergy in financing for disaster risk management and adaptation to climate change’.
http://www.unisdr.org/files/24012_briefingnote04africa.pdf
 

CONFERENCE ON U.S. FOREIGN POLICY AND AFRICA

Extended Submission Date
 
Call for Conference Papers
Tennessee State University
Presents
CONFERENCE ON U.S. FOREIGN POLICY AND AFRICA
The Department of History, Geography, and Political Science, Tennessee State University, Nashville, Tennessee, invites academicians, independent scholars, policymakers, and graduate students to present papers in a one-day conference on the theme, “U.S. foreign policy in Africa in the 21st Century.”

Background
 
Before World War II the United States did not pursue an active policy toward Africa. In the postwar period, the continent continued to remain rather inconsequential in America’s foreign relations despite wartime economic and strategic needs that compelled a more dynamic interest in the continent. The close of the Cold War, an era in which the United States viewed Africa primarily from the lenses of Superpower ideological rivalry, provided for Washington the opportunity to engage Africa in a more constructive manner. Questions relating to the direction of U.S. policy in Africa persist, although it has been over two decades since the demise of the Cold War. Since the dawn of the 21st century, the American-led war on transnational terrorism has introduced a new dimension into United States-Africa relations. It has enhanced Washington’s strategic engagement with the continent. This conference will offer scholars and other participants a unique platform from which to deliberate on critical issues defining contemporary American foreign policy toward Africa. Within the broad theme of the conference, potential topics for presentation may include but are not limited to the following sub-themes:
 
·        The spring revolutions in North Africa
·        Military and strategic partnership with Africa
·        Trade and investment in Africa
·        Intractable African conflicts and conflict resolution
·        Economic growth and sustainable development in Africa
·        Africa in the war on terrorism
·        The Obama administration and Africa
·        Fragile states in Africa
·        The debt crisis in Africa
·        Democratization and good governance in Africa
·        Human rights in Africa
·        Political Islam in Africa
·        The HIV pandemic in Africa
·        Piracy in the Horn of Africa
·        Bilateral relations
 
Guest Speaker
The guest speaker is Mrs. Neneh MacDouall-Gaye, host of Talking Point Africa USA, a TV program. She was a former Gambian Ambassador to the United States. She had also served as Minister of Trade and Industry; and as Minister of Communications and Information Technology as well.
 
Keynote Address
The keynote speaker is the distinguished teacher, author, and award winning scholar of African and Diasporan African history, Dr. Toyin Falola, the Frances Higginbotham Nalle Centennial Professor of History and University Distinguished Teaching Professor at the University of Texas, Austin.
 
Date of Conference
Friday, April 13, 2012
 
Venue
Tennessee State University, Avon Williams Campus, 330 Tenth Avenue North
Nashville, TN 37203
 
Conveners
Dr. Adebayo Oyebade
Professor of History
Tennessee State University, Nashville, TN 37209
 
Dr. Wosene Yefru
Professor of African Studies
Tennessee State University, Nashville, TN 37209

Abstracts/Panel proposals
Each prospective presenter should submit electronically an abstract of 500 words or less to Ms. Cordia McCutcheon at cmccutcheon@tnstate.edu by January 15, 2012. Abstract prepared as Microsoft Word document should include the presenter’s name, title of paper, institutional affiliation, and contact information (mailing address, phone number, and email address). Please, note that submission of abstract automatically grants conference organizers the right to publish it in the conference program and website.
 
Conference Registration Fees
Mandatory non-refundable registration fees for the conference are:
Regular: $50 by Jan. 15; & $60 by Feb. 15 (banquet included).
Student: $30 by Jan. 15; & $40 by Feb. 15 (banquet included).
Banquet only: $25 by Feb. 15.
Please, make your check payable to Tennessee State University.

Publication of Selected Papers
Selected conference papers will be published as a book.
 

Private Sector Engagement in Adaptation to Climate Change

This paper examines the private sector’s progress in adapting to climate change by considering information from sixteen case studies, drawn from a range of industries across the private sector. The case studies provide insight into companies’ awareness of potential climate risks and vulnerabilities, their progress in assessing specific impacts on their businesses and possible ways to respond to them, and their implementation of adaptation measures and strategies to manage these risks. The analysis also examines how companies are taking advantage of new business opportunities arising from climate change. The paper explores companies’ motivations for implementing adaptation measures, and establishes common factors which can affect companies’ capacities to adapt, their incentives for action, and their perspectives on the need to adapt. The analysis considers how these factors can both encourage and impede adaptation, and assesses potential public sector roles for eliminating barriers to action, encouraging engagement and incentivising private sector investment in adaptation.
http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver/download/fulltext/5kg221jkf1g7.pdf?expires=1324458988&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=53F37E800AF411F2A72BCFD91DBB031F 

Think tanks in sub-Saharan Africa: how the political landscape has influenced their origins

This short report examines the origins and development of think tanks across the African continent.
http://www.odi.org.uk/resources/docs/7527.pdf 

The Alleviation of Poverty: How Far Have We Come?

The first section of this report provides a critical discussion of how far the nation has come in the nearly 50 years since Johnson’s famous commitment to end poverty. The next section presents benchmark trends in income poverty using the official poverty measure. Section three examines the economic, social and policy factors that have driven trends in poverty since 1964. Section four briefly discusses the prospects for alleviating poverty during the next decade. The final section discusses policy options for raising earnings among low-skill workers, improving the antipoverty impact of the safety net, and reducing the share of families at high risk of being poor.
http://evans.washington.edu/files/EvansWorkingPaper-2011-02.pdf