16,813 research outputs found
Joseph Hanlon: Elections losers often cry fraud. Can we use data to check?
Our new open-access website contains detailed results of all Mozambique elections since 1999 – right down to local level in most cases. This promises to be a valuable resource for anyone interested in issues of fraud and democracy, explains visiting Senior Fellow, Joseph Hanlon
Joseph Hanlon. Mozambique. The Revolution Under Fire
Pélissier René. Joseph Hanlon. Mozambique. The Revolution Under Fire. In: Politique étrangère, n°3 - 1985 - 50ᵉannée. pp. 795-796
Mozambique's insurgency: a new Boko Haram or youth demanding an end to marginalisation?
Joseph Hanlon argues that Mozambique's new "Islamic" insurgency is about marginalised youth demanding to be heard, and therefore is similar to anti-establishment protest across the world
Production rising on Zimbabwe’s land reform farms
170,000 land reform farmers are reaching the production levels of the white farmers they replaced, Joseph Hanlon and Jeanette Manjengwa report in a new book
Mozambique returns to war, as opposition claims electoral ‘fraud’
Journalists and statisticians are trying to determine if Mozambique opposition leader Afonso Dhlakama was cheated out of the presidency, or if he is just a bad loser, write Joseph Hanlon and Johan Ahlback
Running Mozambique's heroin trade with WhatsApp
The "informal sector" was first observed in developing countries, then it migrated north as the "gig economy" where no one has secure jobs, and LSE's Joseph Hanlon, in a new working paper, shows the closing loop, as Mozambique's heroin trade is taken over by the informal sector working via apps
Bangladeshis have become activists in the fight against climate change
Aid agencies continue to raise money by portraying Bangladeshis as helpless victims displaced by climate change who need our charity. But that is wrong, Joseph Hanlon argues in a new book, because it totally misunderstands the ecology and history. Bangladesh is hugely vulnerable to climate change, but refuses to be a victim
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Roots of civil war: tick 'all of the above
About the book: After a peace agreement, half of all civil wars start again. When a cease fire or peace deal is agreed, aid workers, military personnel, diplomats and others pour in, but what can they do to reduce the chances of a return to war? A growing number of academic courses aimed at practitioners and policy-makers in Britain and elsewhere attempt to answer this question but until now there has been no book to accompany them. In part, a handbook on how to understand each war as a unique phenomenon, it develops a set of war analysis tools, challenging commonly held assumptions about the nature of gender, ethnicity and greed
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Ethnicity and identity
About the book: After a peace agreement, half of all civil wars start again. When a cease fire or peace deal is agreed, aid workers, military personnel, diplomats and others pour in, but what can they do to reduce the chances of a return to war? A growing number of academic courses aimed at practitioners and policy-makers in Britain and elsewhere attempt to answer this question but until now there has been no book to accompany them. In part, a handbook on how to understand each war as a unique phenomenon, it develops a set of war analysis tools, challenging commonly held assumptions about the nature of gender, ethnicity and greed
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