In The News

Etim Imisim January 27, 2005
A member of the World Trade Organization for the past ten years, Nigeria should be well-situated to reap the benefits of free trade. Yet thanks to a set of domestic and international factors, the country may even be sliding backwards. In an interview with Nigerian newspaper This Day, development expert Bankole Olubamise argues gloomily that much has gone afoul in Africa's most populous...
Andy Webb-Vidal January 26, 2005
With the discovery of large natural gas reserves, Trinidad and Tobago, the Caribbean island state, has transformed into the biggest supplier of liquefied natural gas in the Americas. Already, foreign companies like British Gas are building the largest natural gas production units ever constructed. With foreign investment pouring in at an unprecedented rate, the Trinidadian government must wisely...
Eric Johnston January 19, 2005
A recent fatal accident in a nuclear power plant in Mihama highlighted many often neglected aspects of nuclear plant safety and power regulation in Japan. Plants are now older and inspections less thorough, as utility companies seek to maximize operations and minimize costs in an age of deregulation. Scandals and accidents throughout Japan's nuclear history have been serious problems that...
Martin Wolf January 12, 2005
With rampant disease and widespread poverty, sub-Saharan Africa is truly in crisis. The region is in a bind, as several reports indicate a troubling pattern: Poverty begets poverty. And despite critics' claims to the contrary, writes Martin Wolf, those outside the beleaguered continent can and must help. Beyond a moral obligation to end the strife of others, the rest of the world has...
Ginger Thompson January 11, 2005
As international relief agencies rush to tsunami-devastated areas and the UN prepares to coordinate rebuilding efforts, many observers can't help but wonder how long the outpouring of goodwill will last. Six years ago, the aftermath of Hurricane Mitch seemed remarkably similar: World leaders pledged long-term relief, and aid workers populated storm-ravaged areas of Honduras. But now,...
Keith Bezanson January 10, 2005
As the UN prepares to revisit its Millennium Development Goals in September, the topic of international development is on the minds of many. According to this SciDev.Net opinion piece, science and technology aid can play a crucial role in economic development - if used wisely. The authors push for an approach that encourages public-private partnerships that foster innovation, tailoring aid...
Ramesh Thakur January 10, 2005
The United Nations, throughout its 60 years, has never seen a tragedy on par with the South Asian tsunami. This astonishing display of nature's furor rendered political borders insignificant, and the overwhelmingly sympathetic international response has revealed the strength of global interconnectedness. At the January 6 Jakarta summit, the UN officially assumed the helm of relief effort...