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Showing posts with label power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label power. Show all posts

Monday, June 20, 2022

Social justice now for an equitable tomorrow: Reflections from the Consortium of Universities for Global Health Conference 2022

Title:
Social justice now for an equitable tomorrow: Reflections from the Consortium of Universities for Global Health Conference 2022
 
Published:
PLoS medicine, Vol 19 (4), April 2022
https://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=10.1371/journal.pmed.1003995
 
Description:
PLOS Medicine editors Beryne Odeny and Callam Davidson report from the Consortium of Universities for Global Health conference.

Thursday, March 24, 2022

Wealth, Power And Institutional Change in Tanzania’s Parliament Get access Arrow [Scholarly Article - African Affairs, 2022]

Title: 
Wealth, Power And Institutional Change in Tanzania’s Parliament Get access Arrow  Author: Michaela Collord 
 
Published: 
African Affairs, Volume 121, Issue 482, 5 January 2022, Pages 1–28
 
Abstract: 
Tanzania’s legislature, or Bunge, has undergone considerable change in recent decades, gradually strengthening to attain unprecedented influence during Jakaya Kikwete’s presidency (2005–2015) only to decline again under President John Magufuli (2015–2021). This article investigates Bunge’s institutional evolution, asking what explains institutional change within an authoritarian legislature, dominated in this case by the ruling party, Chama Cha Mapinduzi. Building on recent literature highlighting the influence of elite contestation on legislative outcomes, the article seeks to go further by probing the nature and origins of the elite factions driving legislative institutional change. It uses insights from a recent political settlements literature, as well as older work on African political economy, to outline how changes to Tanzania’s Parliament have both reflected—and magnified—shifting patterns of elite contestation within CCM. These elite power struggles, in turn, vary with changes in the extent of private wealth accumulation and the related expansion of rival patron–client factions. When private accumulation has continued relatively uninhibited, as was true under Kikwete but not Magufuli, then factional contestation intensified and surfaced in parliament, helping to drive legislative institutional strengthening. For this analysis, I use interview and archival data gathered during extensive fieldwork.
 

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Tallinn University, Estonia - SOGOLAS Research seminar in Zoom: György Schöpflin “Democracy, Power and Complexity” (4 November 2020)

Title of seminar:
Democracy, Power and Complexity

Speaker:
György Schöpflin, former Jean Monet Professor of politics at the University College London. He also served as a Member of the European Parliament for 15 years

Date:
4 November 2020

Time:
16:00 - 17:30
 
Platform:
Zoom

For more information and to register:

Thursday, March 5, 2020

REPORT - Best Countries 2020: Global rankings, international news and data insight

Title:
Best Countries 2020: Global rankings, international news and data insight

By:
The content leverages data derived from a proprietary survey produced in partnership with U.S. News & World Report, BAV Group and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, specifically professor David J. Reibstein.

From the report:
"The 2020 Best Countries report and rankings are based on how global perceptions define countries in terms of a number of qualitative characteristics, impressions that have the potential to drive trade, travel and investment and directly affect national economies. The report covers perceptions of 73 nations."

To read the report:
https://media.beam.usnews.com/8e/b0/c99b324c4a0a8c1f6dd7c76d903c/200108-best-countries-overall-rankings-2020.pdf