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South Africa to Baltimore: The Place of Violence in…
In the fall of 2015, university students in South Africa protested the announcement of impending tuition fee hikes…
The Mosul Dam: an Unlikely Weapon of Unparalleled Force
Mosul used to be the second largest city in Iraq and the Northwest commercial center, naturally leaving it with a…
First Comes War, Then Comes Famine
They’ve killed upwards of 20,000 people through suicide bombs and armed raids, decimated large swaths of land,…
The Reluctant Welcome of the Calais Migrants and What It…
When it comes to the dispatching of the Calais migrants throughout France, there seems to be two types of…
The South China Sea Dispute: A Diplomatic Showdown
With rising tensions in the South China Sea, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries are…
Crossing Arms: The Plight and Protest of the Oromo in…
Equity statement: Accurate information on African politics and culture is extremely difficult to attain. Western…
44 States, 86 Houses, 5923 Legislators, And Almost Zero…
Those political junkies like me anxious to see if America is marginally closer to a Trumpocalypse might find…
Italy’s Veto Threat and the Refugee Crisis
The Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi is currently threatening to veto the European Union budget if other EU…
Review’s Radio: The Economic Roots of Hungary’s…
Professor Juliet Johnson, McGill Director of the European Union Center of Excellence, executive member of…
Trump v. United States (2017): An Assault on Democracy
Last February, I authored a piece describing how anti-establishment rhetoric in the 2016 election primaries would…
In the Shadows of Mosul
On October 17th, Iraqi forces led the advance on Mosul to recapture the city that had fallen to the self-proclaimed…
Miloš Zeman: Pushing Czech Foreign Policy East
October 28th marked 98 years since the founding of Czechoslovakia. A national holiday in the Czech Republic, the…