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Foreign Policy & Strategic Autonomy- “Is Non-Alignment Africa’s Best Strategy in a Multipolar World?”

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  Foreign Policy & Strategic Autonomy “Is Non-Alignment Africa’s Best Strategy in a Multipolar World?” As global power diffuses from a unipolar system dominated by the United States into a more complex multipolar order—featuring China, Russia, the European Union, and emerging middle powers—Africa finds itself at a familiar yet transformed crossroads. During the Cold War, many African states adopted non-alignment to avoid entanglement in U.S.–Soviet rivalry. Today, a similar question re-emerges under new conditions: Is non-alignment still Africa’s best strategy—or has the nature of global power changed so fundamentally that a different approach is required? The answer is not straightforward. Classical non-alignment, as practiced in the 20th century, is insufficient for today’s geoeconomic realities. However, a modernized version—strategic non-alignment or “multi-alignment”—may represent Africa’s most viable path to autonomy and leverage. 1. What Is Non-Alignment in Today’s Cont...

Immigration, Diaspora, and Soft Power- Core angle: Human connection between Africa and the U.S. “Brain Drain or Brain Gain? Rethinking African Talent Migration”

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  Immigration, Diaspora, and Soft Power-  Core angle: Human connection between Africa and the U.S.  “Brain Drain or Brain Gain?  Rethinking African Talent Migration”  Why it matters: Many Africans have personal or family ties to the U.S. With 900+ words Immigration, Diaspora, and Soft Power Brain Drain or Brain Gain? Rethinking African Talent Migration Few debates in Africa’s development discourse are as persistent—or as emotionally charged—as the question of talent migration. For decades, the movement of skilled Africans to countries like the United States has been framed as a loss: doctors leaving understaffed hospitals, engineers departing fragile infrastructure systems, and entrepreneurs relocating to more supportive environments. This narrative, commonly labeled “brain drain,” captures a real concern. Yet it is increasingly incomplete. In a globalized, digitally connected world, migration is no longer a one-way transfer of talent—it is a circulatory ...

China-African Union Dialogue- How Can Africa Maximize Benefits While Minimizing Structural Risks in Global Partnerships?

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  How Can Africa Maximize Benefits While Minimizing Structural Risks in Global Partnerships? Africa’s engagement with global powers, including China, the European Union, the United States, and emerging actors, has expanded rapidly over the last two decades. These partnerships bring unprecedented opportunities for investment, infrastructure development, technology transfer, and industrialization. However, they also expose African countries to structural risks, including debt dependency, economic asymmetries, governance vulnerabilities, and environmental and social pressures. The challenge for African policymakers is to maximize the benefits of global partnerships while minimizing structural risks , ensuring sustainable growth, strategic autonomy, and long-term development. I. Understanding the Structural Risks 1. Debt and Financial Vulnerability Large-scale infrastructure projects and industrial initiatives often rely on foreign loans and financing. Without careful management, t...

Migration & Integration Policy — Did European Asylum Systems Properly Screen Ideological Risks?

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  Migration & Integration Policy — Did European Asylum Systems Properly Screen Ideological Risks? The question of whether European asylum systems have properly screened ideological risks — including the potential for extremist radicalization — is both complex and highly consequential. It intersects with humanitarian law, national security, integration policy, public administration capacity, and political dynamics across the European Union and associated states. To address it comprehensively, we must examine: The legal framework governing asylum and ideological risk screening; Operational practices and challenges in member states; The extent to which screening has identified individuals with extremist affiliations; Structural gaps in migration and integration policies; The balance between humanitarian obligations and security imperatives; Lessons learned and policy recommendations. This analysis takes into account both statistical evidence and institutional ...

Are authorities applying laws equally across religious groups? No, because in Britain the police side with Islamic extremists about walking dogs and even display a country flag.

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  Are Authorities Applying Laws Equally Across Religious Groups? Questions about whether authorities apply laws equally across religious groups are central to debates about fairness, neutrality, and public trust in democratic institutions . In societies governed by the rule of law, the expectation is clear: laws must apply equally to everyone , regardless of religion, ideology, ethnicity, or political affiliation. If citizens believe that authorities enforce rules unevenly, confidence in public institutions can erode quickly. However, determining whether unequal enforcement actually exists requires careful examination of legal principles, policing practices, and specific incidents rather than general perceptions alone. The issue involves several overlapping factors: constitutional law, policing discretion, political pressures, and the complexities of managing public space in diverse societies. 1. The Principle of Equality Before the Law Most democratic legal systems are built upon...