FAO Quotables

"But being right, even morally right, isn't everything. It is also important to be competent, to be consistent, and to be knowledgeable. It's important for your soldiers and diplomats to speak the language of the people you want to influence. It's important to understand the ethnic and tribal divisions of the place you hope to assist."
-Anne Applebaum

Showing posts with label cyberspace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cyberspace. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Lazy Reporting, New Insight on Somalia, and Ethiopia's Nationhood Reconsidered

What I'm Reading Today:

The west's lazy reporting of Africa by Afua Hirsch 

EXCERPT: There is a laziness applied to media coverage of Africa that is seldom seen elsewhere. Kenyan writer Binyavanga Wainaina brilliantly captured this in his Granta essay "How to Write About Africa". "You must always include The Starving African, who wanders the refugee camp nearly naked, and waits for the benevolence of the west," he wrote. "Her children have flies on their eyelids and pot bellies, and her breasts are flat and empty. She must look utterly helpless. She can have no past, no history; such diversions ruin the dramatic moment. Moans are good."

There are still too many journalists unwittingly following his advice.

Found: A Somalia we do not know -
EXCERPT: "Getting Somalia Wrong" is not just an opposing view to the usual horror stories we hear about Somalia -- Harper covers the good, the bad and the ugly. What makes this book different and important is that the author does not see her subject as one-dimensional. It is a book that attempts, successfully, in my view, to explain a country by getting to know the people who live in it.

The next time you hear about Somali shops being burnt in Khaye­litsha or on the East Rand and you wonder why they bother staying, Harper’s book will help you to ­understand where those nameless and faceless people come from and why they left their homeland in the first place.



Ethiopia’s nationhood reconsidered
EXCERPT: Just as the historic realities of long-established nations like Ethiopia pose a challenge to conventional ideas about modern nationhood, so the contemporary Ethiopian experience reinforces pressures to rethink conventional notions of national boundaries. The nation whose conquest and dispersal across the world two millennia ago gave rise to the term diaspora seemed anomalous up to the past century, when a home territory with well-defined and secure boundaries seemed the only way to construe nationhood. The Jewish case now seems normative for many countries, whose boundaries, like that of ancient Israel, have expanded to involve a level of co-determination that previously could not have been imagined. The globalizing tendencies favored by electronic media and easy transportation will continue not only to promote subnational and supranational communities, but will also play a major role in strengthening the age-old nation of Ethiopia, reconfigured now in three parts: bet-agar (Homeland); wutch-agar (Diaspora); and sayberagar (Cyberspace).

LINKS:
http://www.donlevine.com/uploads/1/1/3/8/11384462/ethiopias-nationhood-reconsidered.pdf
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/apr/15/west-lazy-reporting-africa?CMP=twt_gu
http://mg.co.za/article/2012-04-05-found-a-somalia-we-do-not-know#disqus_thread 

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Africa: Declaration of Delegates from Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi from the 2011 East African Workshop on Cyberspace Security

Africa: Declaration of Delegates from Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi from the 2011 East African Workshop on Cyberspace Security http://www.state.gov/s/cyberissues/releasesandremarks/169429.htm
Declaration of Delegates from Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi from the 2011 East African Workshop on Cyberspace Security
July 27, 2011

We, the delegates of Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi, meeting July 25-27, 2011, in Nairobi, Kenya, have enjoyed a full exchange of information on the challenges of cyber and mobile security in the 21st century. It is clear that the Internet, mobile networks, and related information and communications technologies (ICT) have become indispensible tools for governments, businesses, civil society, and individuals across the globe. These technologies have spurred tremendous economic development, increased the free flow of information, and promoted gains in efficiency, productivity and creativity across East Africa.

This dramatic growth requires an increased focus by all users on a wide range of threats such as cybercrime, damage to critical infrastructures, and disruption of communications. Such threats can only be fully addressed by developing a strong culture of cybersecurity, creating robust response capabilities, and enacting appropriate and effective national policies. Protecting our economies and citizens against cyber threats requires strong national and transnational collaboration between governments, businesses and civil society, so that security, economic development and freedom go hand in hand.

Therefore, we, the delegates of Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi, consistent with Articles 98 and 99 of the Treaty for the Establishment of the East African Community (EAC) whereby Partner States undertake to cooperate in the establishment and operation of communications infrastructure and the development and deployment of ICT applications and services, and building on the work of the EAC Task Force on Cyberlaws, commit to taking the following steps necessary to develop strong and effective cybersecurity frameworks, including:

*          Developing and promoting a robust culture of cybersecurity that recognizes and effectively responds to the global threats and challenges associated with the Internet and interconnected mobile networks and related technologies, including exchanging cybersecurity best practices and maintaining an open dialogue on the full range of challenges and threats
*          Recognizing that mobile networks and related technologies play a central role in East Africa’s economic development, and should, therefore, be a priority area for cybersecurity efforts,
*          Building on the work of the EAC Cyberlaws Reform Programme and in particular the EAC Framework for Cyberlaws, adopted in May 2010, in which Partner States committed to enact comprehensive cybersecurity legislation, including cybercrime legislation consistent with the Council of Europe Convention on Cybercrime (2001)
*          Strengthening capacity to investigate and prosecute cybercrimes and to assist foreign law enforcement agencies in urgent criminal investigations involving electronic evidence by, inter alia, joining and participating in the 24/7 Cybercrime Network
*          Creating national Computer Emergency Readiness Teams (CERTs) and exchanging best practices on their effective utilization and collaboration

We thank the Governments of the United States and Kenya for their support for this workshop and look forward to our continued partnership