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  Weekly readings










































































































































































































African Union and United Nations Partnership Key to the Future of Peace Operations in Africa



[ © Africa Center for Strategic Studies ]

 UNSCR 2719 provides a framework for peace operations led by the African Union (AU) to access UN funding through assessed contributions. This has the potential to make peace operations more effective and sustainable while enhancing African leadership in managing them. It was necessitated in part by a decline of UN peacekeeping and a shift to African-led missions  

From mines to markets: How Africa and Europe can become green industry partners of choice



[ © European Council on Foreign Relations ]

 The European Union’s relationship with Africa is one based on “common values and interests”, according to the bloc’s own official declarations. Yet a key test of these shared values and interests can be found in how Europeans engage their African counterparts in diplomacy around critical raw materials (CRMs) and the energy transition to which CRMs are so important.  

Environmental Pathways for Reconciliation in Yemen - Consultation Report 2024



[ © European Institute of Peace ]

 The consultation examined the environmental dimension of local grievances and conflict by exploring Yemenis’ perceptions of environmental issues, their impact on peace and security, and existing or potential environmental peacemaking solutions.  

Harvesting Reforms: Lebanons Food Security and Sovereignty



[ © Executive magazine ]

 Food security is a prerequisite for any people’s sovereignty. The need for food’s physical and mental sustenance affects every human being with an existential might. It consequently ranks in import perhaps second only after the need for a planetary home with breathable air and stable gravity.  

Continued Progress in Saudi Economic Diversification



[ © The Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington ]

 Diversifying the economy away from oil is one of the key goals of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 program. Data from 2022 indicated that progress was being made toward a more diversified economy. Similarly, developments in exports, output, government revenue, and employment show that, across most metrics, further progress was made during 2023, although oil is still the dominant force in the Saudi economy  

Reading of the Week: Sea-Level Rise in the Nile Delta: Promoting Adaptation Through Circular Migration



[ © Baker Institute ]

 Since the early 2000s, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has identified the Nile Delta as one of the parts of the world most vulnerable to climate change impacts, including sea-level rise and rising temperatures. The climate crisis is compounding an already difficult situation in the delta: Egypt is experiencing sustained demographic growth, gaining 1 million residents every seven months.  

Equatorial Guineas oil and gas industry continues to shrink



[ © GIS ]

 In February 2024, American oil giant ExxonMobil announced it was exiting the Republic of Equatorial Guinea, effectively severing a nearly three-decade-long relationship. The company played a leading role in the development of the oil sector in the African nation. In 1995, Mobil Corporation discovered the Zafiro oil field, and Exxon entered the scene after its takeover of Mobil in 1999.  

The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS): A Region and an Organisation at a Crossroads



[ © Italian Institute for International Political Studies ]

 Following an intensification of normative contestation in the region, together with shifts in global politics and order, West Africa and the Sahel seem to be currently experiencing a redrawing and redefinition of regional spaces. On 28 January 2024, the military leaders of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger – who had recently formed the Alliance des Ètats du Sahel (AES) – declared their withdrawal from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)  

Reading of the Week: The False Choice in the Debate Over Artificial Intelligence Regulation



[ © Lawfare ]

 Since the release of ChatGPT3.5 roughly a year and a half ago, the promises and perils of artificial intelligence (AI) have captured the world’s attention. We are currently in the midst of a vigorous debate about which AI harms to focus on—those occurring now or more speculative harms that might happen in the future.  

The future is urban: fostering Gulf-European cooperation through sustainable development



[ © Brussels International Center ]

 In recent decades, urbanisation has emerged as a major trend on a global scale. This is particularly evident across Asia, Latin America and Africa, where global megacities with a population of 10 million or more experienced a population increase of 350 per cent between 1990 and 2018. This trend also plays out in the Gulf region  

The Elephant in the Climate Room: Financing Sustainable Security and Supporting Future-Fit Systems



[ © Istituto Affari Internazionali ]

 This paper outlines the key challenges facing policymakers ahead of this year's “Spring Meetings” of the IMF and World Bank, particularly in the context of food security challenges, global instability, and gaps in climate finance. The gap in climate finance has implications beyond sustainable development and humanitarian need.  

The enormous risks and uncertain benefits of an Israeli strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities



[ © Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists ]

 Iran’s unprecedented attack on Israel on April 13 has significantly escalated the tensions between the countries. For the first time, a declared and extensive Iranian military operation was carried out on Israeli territory. Now, the decision on how to respond rests with Israel. A direct war between the two countries now no longer seems unlikely.