For many rural households the cultivation of opium poppy represents the key means by which they can achieve welfare under the conditions of pervasive risk and insecurity in Afghanistan. This briefing paper argues that understanding changing levels of opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan requires recognition of the multifunctional role of opium poppy cultivation in the livelihoods of rural Afghan households.
This briefing paper explores the relationship between foreign aid, statebuilding and the crisis currently facing Afghanistan. It analyses the effects of assistance to date, and presents a series of recommendations for future action by the Afghan government and donors.
Topic:
Foreign Aid, Governance, Crisis Management, and State Building
The issue of equal economic opportunities for members of national and ethnic minorities in Europe is important not only for economic prosperity, but also for the future peace and security of the European continent. Unequal access to employment, education, health and housing has, over the past fifty years, undermined political and economic stability in regions as diverse as the Balkans, Northern Ireland, South Tyrol and Cyprus. However, while European academics, think tanks and policy-makers have focused on social and economic exclusion on the one hand, and minority rights on the other, few attempts have been made to link the two.
Topic:
Security, Economics, Minorities, and Participation
Botswana Institute for Development Policy Analysis
Abstract:
This brief will focus on three of the most important non-SACU trade agreements that affect SACU, that is the SADC Trade Protocol, Economic Partnership Agreement negotiations with the European Union, and the US Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA). The policy brief is based on the study, "Diversifying Botswana Exports: An Overview," carried out by BIDPA and the World Bank in 2005.
Topic:
Treaties and Agreements, Bilateral Relations, Economy, Multilateralism, and Trade
Botswana Institute for Development Policy Analysis
Abstract:
This policy brief focuses on the role of infrastructure and, in particular, the cost of utilities and their impact on export growth and diversification. The availability of and access to infrastructure s an essential prerequisite for the competitiveness of firms and countries in world markets. Inadequate access--in terms of cost and availability--to water, power supplies and telecommunications make it difficult for firms to operate efficiently.
Topic:
Infrastructure, Diversification, Exports, and Utilities
Botswana Institute for Development Policy Analysis
Abstract:
This policy brief focuses on customs and border procedures in Botswana and their role on export diversification initiatives. Customs is at the centre of trade facilitation because it is where the majority of administrative and procedural requirements involved in the movement of goods are and where the highest potential gains in trade facilitation are to be found. The policy brief is based on the findings of the 2005 BIDPA and World Bank study entitled "Diversifying Botswana's Exports: An Overview."
Topic:
Economy, Borders, Diversification, Exports, Trade, and Customs
Botswana Institute for Development Policy Analysis
Abstract:
This brief reviews the contribution that transportation makes to trade facilitation in Botswana. As a landlocked, export-driven economy, efficient transport and transit procedures are important to support competitiveness and export growth. Transport costs are particularly important to landlocked countries, where the additional distances to be covered can increase product prices, undermine the competitiveness of exports, and generally make it more difficult to compete in international markets. The policy brief draws from the findings of the 2005 BIDPA and World Bank study entitled "Diversifying Botswana's Exports: An Overview," as well as other relevant studies.
Topic:
Markets, Diversification, Trade, Transportation, and Customs
South Eastern Europe (SEE) has been under great pressure from the European Union (EU) to modernize and improve its border management, while simultaneously trying to facilitate cross-border flows and good neighborly relations in the region. The forthcoming accession to the EU of two countries from the region, Bulgaria and Romania, and recently opened negotiations for the accession of two more, Croatia and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, have the potential to damage both cross-border flows and regional stability. One of the principal factors influencing this potential is the requirement for acceding countries to implement the Schengen regime – in particular, the so-called “black list” of countries whose nationals require visas to enter the Schengen area. At this time, from the Balkan region only Croatia, Bulgaria and Romania are not on the “black list”.
Topic:
International Relations, Foreign Policy, and Regional Cooperation
Political Geography:
Europe, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Balkans, Romania, Macedonia, and Croatia
Faced with its worst crisis since gaining independence in 1999, the new nation of Timor-Leste is once again the subject of upcoming UN Security Council resolutions that call for the reintroduction of peacekeeping forces and international police. Timor's embattled prime minister, Mari Alkatiri, has left the government after the threatened resignation of the popular president, Xanana Gusmao. Australian-led troops are trying to stabilize the situation while the UN conducts an assessment in anticipation of deployment of a new peacekeeping force.
Haiti's new government faces an enormous economic challenge. Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere and among the poorest countries in the world. Two thirds of Haiti's eight million citizens live in poverty. Half of its adult population is illiterate. Only a quarter of its children attend school. Since a brief spike in the 1970's, Haiti's economy has experienced a steady decline as a result of rapacious government policies and, possibly well intentioned, but destructive international sanctions.