La journaliste algérienne Fayrouz Ziani a été distinguée par un Emmy International, l’une des récompenses les plus prestigieuses au monde. Ce prix, qui honore une […]
L’article Emmy Awards 2025 : la journaliste algérienne Fayrouz Ziani distinguée à New York est apparu en premier sur .
Les récentes intempéries et les chutes de neige abondantes depuis hier ont entraîné la fermeture de nombreuses routes et axes routiers dans plusieurs wilayas. Selon […]
L’article Info trafic en temps réel : Liste des routes fermées par la neige ce jeudi 27 novembre est apparu en premier sur .
Le procès du complexe IMETAL continue de mettre au jour une cascade d’irrégularités, de tensions internes et de décisions contestées. Devant le juge, les cadres […]
L’article « Les décisions venaient d’en haut » : déballage ahurissant au procès Imetal et peines sévères requises est apparu en premier sur .
Une recommandation du médiateur fédéral belge a été émise afin de réexaminer la nécessité de la révision de l’actuelle procédure de demande de visa Schengen […]
L’article Visa Schengen pour la Belgique : la procédure de demande remise en question est apparu en premier sur .
In this chapter we draw on our research with displaced people, conflict, violence, gender, and humanitarian aid between 2006 and 2024 in different African countries, which we conducted separately but were brought together by these shared research interests. We address the nexus between conflict, peace, and forced migration using examples from Africa. We situate the discussion within the precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial eras, which we take not as mere footnotes but as salient periods in the continent’s history that have influenced current conflicts and forced displacement in Africa. We therefore emphasize the role of history in understanding contemporary conflicts and forced migration on the continent. In doing so, we critique Western research perspectives on forms of violence and their ahistorical explanations of contemporary violent conflicts in Africa. We explain the role of colonial borders not only in engendering conflict but also in creating structural obstacles for refugees to contribute to transformation in countries of origin. We also critique the separation of peacebuilding in the countries of origin from refugee protection in host countries and highlight this as a limitation of global (i.e., Western) perspectives on peacebuilding.
The world is moving away from a single, post-2000 consensus around multilateralism and poverty reduction. What replaces it depends on which coalition wins the argument, and then bakes that argument into institutions and finance. So what are the visions for the global development architecture in 2030 that we see? One is ‘Aid Retrenchment with Nationalist Conditionality’. Assistance is folded into foreign, trade, and interior policy. Grants shrink, multilateral agencies are sidelined, and cooperation becomes bilateral deals tied to migration control, geopolitical alignment, or access to minerals. Rights, gender, and climate justice recede. A second world is ‘Strategic Multilateralism’. The multilateral development banks stay central, but their remit narrows to macro-stability, crisis response, and “risk containment”. Concessional finance is rationed to countries seen as fragile or geostrategic. Aid rhetoric turns technocratic and securitised and health framed as biosecurity. A third vision is ‘Pluralist Development Cooperation’. There is no single system, but many partially overlapping regimes: Chinese, Indian, Gulf, regional, and club initiatives. Low and middle income countries gain bargaining space by choosing across offers. The trade-off is fragmentation. Rules on debt workouts, safeguards, and transparency diverge, and global public goods struggle for predictable funding. Finally, a fourth vision is ‘Global Solidarity 2.0’. Development cooperation is rebuilt around shared risks such as climate stability, pandemics, antimicrobial resistance, and debt contagion. North and South co-lead a pooled Global Public Goods Facility. Contributions reflect income and carbon profile, and access reflects exposure to cross-border risk. The donor-recipient binary fades, even if frictions persist.
La saison hivernale s’installe progressivement sur l’Algérie, annonçant des journées froides, pluvieuses et neigeuses sur de nombreuses régions du pays. Ce jeudi 27 novembre, les […]
L’article ALERTES MÉTÉO du jeudi 27/11 : vigilance « orange » fortes pluies et chutes de neige dans ces wilayas est apparu en premier sur .