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BusinessWeek March 12, 2007 Stanley Reed |
The Opening Of Libya Harvard professor Michael Porter is helping to restructure the economy in Libya, but skepticism abounds. |
Parameters Spring 2006 Dafna Hochman |
Rehabilitating a Rogue: Libya's WMD Reversal and Lessons for US Policy Ultimately, there is no clear formula prescribing the rehabilitation of rogues or a clear roadmap to generate voluntary disarmament. The Libyan reversal suggests that US policymakers should be mindful to appeal to a diverse array of possible approaches as a necessary. |
BusinessWeek May 3, 2004 Anderson et al. |
Big Oil Treks Back To Tripoli Western executives are offering Colonel Muammar Qaddafi cash for oil exploration and production rights in Libya. |
Reason June 2003 Jesse Walker |
The Dubious Anarchist Libya's libertarian rhetoric |
BusinessWeek October 23, 2006 Eamon Javers |
Lobbying For Libya Hired guns are helping the once-rogue nation walk the D.C. walk. |
BusinessWeek April 5, 2004 |
Rewarding Libya For Good Behavior The U.S. and Britain are making good on their pledge to reward Libya for getting rid of weapons of mass destruction, ending support for terrorism, and coming clean on the Pan Am Flight 103 bombing in Lockerbie, Scotland, in the 1980s. |
BusinessWeek April 14, 2011 Stanley Reed |
Where Has Libya's Oil Gone? Italy's Eni and others have to deal with rebels and loyalists, essentially shutting down operations until the outcome is clearer |
BusinessWeek March 24, 2011 Kelly & Westbrook |
Libya Has $70 Billion to Invest -- and No Takers Private equity firms such as California's Colony Capital once courted Libyan investments, but backed off before the war broke out. |
Adventure April 2005 Kira Salak |
Rediscovering Libya Off-limits to Americans for decades, Libya has reopened its doors. The author follows the 19th-century trail of Scotsman Hugh Clapperton, the first Westerner to explore the mystical heart of the Sahara. |
BusinessWeek March 26, 2007 Stanley Reed |
Going For A Gusher In Libya Italy's ENI is beating out giants like BP and ExxonMobil, partly because it never left. |