From Angola and Liberia to Iraq and the Congo, wars have taken place in resource rich countries full of poor people. In Wars of Plunder Philippe Le Billon explores how resources have shaped recent conflicts, and what the international community has tried to do about it. Focusing on key resources-oil, diamonds, and timber-he argues that resources and wars are linked in three main ways. First, resource revenues finance belligerents, a trend that has become all the more conspicuous since the withdrawal of Cold War foreign sponsorship in the late 1980s. Although the 'War on Terror' has redefined military assistance and the internationalisation of war, many belligerents continue to rely on and profit from 'conflict resources'. Second, resource exploitation generates conflict. As global demand for raw materials has sharply increased, competition over critical resources such as oil has resulted in a flurry of 'resource conflicts', from local community struggles against mining multinationals to regional and international tensions. Third, economic shocks and poor governance sharply increase the risk of war (the 'resource curse'). While today's resource boom is a major economic opportunity for resource rich but poor countries, reliance on resource exports often implies sharp economic downturns. Not all resources are the same, however, and effective responses are at hand. Sanctions, military interventions and wealth sharing have helped bring an end to conflicts, yet only deeper domestic and international reforms in resource governance can stop the plunder.
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Exploring Physical Patterns. Teacher's Guide
But the observation that follows the statement above is revealing: "Because the open houses did not have any chairs nor were they organized in a traditional 'town hall meeting' format, several individuals who merely wanted to ...
The improper use of statistics in research has become a plague to science; several publications show that more than 50% of papers have at least one statistical error.
"It's why You're Swinging the Mattock": An Evaluation of the Green Corps Programme : Final Report
Toronto and Montreal : McGraw - Hill Ryerson . Ontario Department of Lands and Forests . 1965. A history of Sault Ste . Marie Forest District . District History Series , no . 20. Toronto . Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources .
本书获上海市马克思主义学术著作出版基金资助
This review provides an unprecedented pan-African synthesis of CBNRM, drawing on multiple authors and a wide range of documented experiences from Southern, Eastern, Western and Central Africa.