33 research outputs found
Nepal's War on Human Rights: A summit higher than Everest
Nepal has witnessed serious human rights violations including arbitrary arrests, detentions, "disappearances", extra judicial executions, abductions and torture carried out by both the Royal Nepalese Army and the Maoist rebels in the 10 years of the "peoples war". Women and children have borne the brunt of the conflict. Massive displacement has led to adverse social and psychological consequences. While the reasons for the conflict are mainly indigenous and rooted in the social and economic in-equities, remedies for health inequities must come not only from the health sector but also from broad social policies and adopting a participatory and conflict-sensitive approach to development. Meanwhile the international community needs to use its leverage to urge both sides to accept a human rights accord and honor international human rights and humanitarian laws, while investigating allegations of abuse and prosecute those responsible
From urban catastrophe to 'model' city?: politics, security and development in post-conflict Kigali
In the years immediately after the 1994 Rwandan genocide, Kigali was a site of continuing crisis amid extraordinary levels of urban population growth, as refugees returned to Rwanda in their millions. Yet unlike many post-conflict cities that spiral into endemic crime and instability, it was rapidly securitised in the context of political consolidation and large amounts of foreign aid, and hailed by the UN as a ‘model, modern city’. This paper analyses the government’s approach to securitising Kigali, interrogating how its rapid trajectory from epicentre of conflict to carefully planned showcase for development has been achieved. It is argued that Kigali bears the weight of many of Rwanda’s development aspirations and keeping it secure and orderly is viewed as critical by the government. After examining the national and local processes through which the government has aimed to achieve ‘secure urbanisation’, the potential longer-term implications of its urban development strategy are considered
Financialisation, industrial strategy and the challenges of climate change and environmental degradation
The paper discusses the nature of the present era of financialisation, outlining the changes in the financial sector and its relations with the real sector which are particularly relevant for the climate emergency. The relationship between growth of the financial sector (‘financial development’) and economic growth is reviewed, and the relevant of recent empirical findings for the role of the financial sector in addressing the climate emergency drawn out. It is argued that the policy approach to the climate emergency and environmental degradation should be embedded within an industrial strategy. Further, it is argued that the structures of the financial sector need to be changed to encourage financial institutions which are more favourably disposed towards to the allocation of funds to ‘green investment’. It is also argued that the central bank should act in ways that are supportive of environmental policies but that their role is a rather limited one
