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Outside September 2008 Jason Gay |
Positive Spin Almost fifteen years after the genocide, tiny Rwanda is suddenly a hot adventure destination, the new darling of multinational investors, and, says mountain-bike legend Tom Ritchey, one extra-long bicycle short of a comeback. |
Finance & Development December 2011 Calestous Juma |
Africa's New Engine As Africa's middle class grows, policymakers should place a premium on regional economic integration and the associated investment in infrastructure, technical training, and support of entrepreneurs. |
Reason November 2002 Charles Pena |
Murder Most Foul To stop genocide, the U.S. must learn to intervene more carefully, argues Samantha Power in A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide. |
HBS Working Knowledge February 28, 2005 Martha Lagace |
Making Competitiveness a Lever for Good in Africa Malik Fal, Africa director of OTF Group consultants, says the principles of competitiveness can kick-start African economies. Extreme case in point: Rwanda. |
Salon.com December 5, 2001 Suzy Hansen |
My neighbor, the war criminal An author who followed the lives of survivors in Rwanda and Bosnia talks about how people and nations learn to go on after they've suffered the unthinkable... |
Parameters November 2004 Mike Denning |
A Prayer for Marie: Creating an Effective African Standby Force While the Rwanda tragedy is unparalleled with regard to the killers' speed and "efficiency," there is nothing new about violence on the African continent. |
Fast Company March 2010 Jeff Chu |
Update: The Resurgence of Rwanda Rwanda hit two milestones in recent months. First, the World Bank named it the No.1 reformer in its Doing Business 2010 report, and it is also set to close the Gacaca courts, the community-justice system that has prosecuted perpetrators of the 1994 genocide. |
TIME Asia August 30, 2010 |
Inbox Opinions from readers on Time Magazine's cover image, Rwanda's plight, and the BP oil spill. |
Inc. September 2004 Hillary Johnson |
How I Did It: Amber Chand Fleeing Uganda, Amber Chand came to the U.S. and built Ebiza, an artisan handicrafts retail company selling produces made in war-torn nations. |
Reason Aug/Sep 2009 Michael C. Moynihan |
The Failure of African Aid Western aid to Africa has made poor countries poorer, retarded their economic growth, and entrenched despotic regimes, argues the Zambian-born economist Dambisa Moyo in her new book Dead Aid. |