Foreign Policy Blogs

Human Rights

The Power Game Where Women Always Lose

The Power Game Where Women Always Lose

  Last year, a girl named Amina El-Filali was raped in her town of Larache, Morocco, where her parents filed a criminal complaint. The case was taken to court where, in accordance with Article 475 of the Penal Code the judge ordered the rapist to marry his victim, thereby absolving him of his crime. Since Amina […]

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World Water Day

World Water Day

In developing nations we tend to take each sip of water for granted, as much of it comes in fancy packaged bottles and comes clean from our taps.  However each sip is life saving and for many children in the developing world, it is that drop of water that could be the drop that kills […]

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News…

News…

Moroccan girl, wed to rapist, kills herself A Moroccan law that allowed a rapist to avoid punishment by marrying the 16-year-old girl he raped is being decried the world over after the girl, Amina Filali, reportedly took her own life last weekend by swallowing rat poison. Filali was not old enough to legally marry. Historic […]

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Delivering Sustainable Solutions to Women and Girls

Delivering Sustainable Solutions to Women and Girls

Last week was International Women’s Day, a day to celebrate women and girls and increase awareness about their marginalization across the globe. Much work remains to be done, but there are hundreds of organizations and efforts working to address the issue of female rights across the world. Women Deliver, a global advocacy organization, recently announced […]

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News…

Malaria is an early threat to fetus, study finds The growth of a fetus can be stunted even when expectant mothers infected with malaria early in their pregnancies no longer show any symptoms, according to a study by a unit of the Mahidol University-Oxford University Tropical Medicine Research Program in Bangkok. The findings bolster the […]

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The Right to Read: Increasing Global Literacy

The Right to Read: Increasing Global Literacy

According to UNICEF’s report, Literacy the Global Challenge, a profile of youth and adult literacy at the mid-point of the United Nations Literacy Decade (2003 – 2012), found that more than 774 million (almost one in five adults) do not have the basic literacy and numeracy skills necessary to fully participate fully in society.  In many regions, especially where […]

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International Women’s Day

International Women’s Day

Today, March 8th is International Women’s Day (IWD), which was established to commemorate the struggle women and girls across the globe continue to endure in obtaining their basic human rights.  In 2011, the United States made the presidential proclamation that the entire month of March will be Women’s History Month.  2012’s theme is Connecting Girls, Inspiring […]

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International Women’s Day: Malnourished Mamas

International Women’s Day: Malnourished Mamas

Last Spring, while living in Port-au-Prince, I pitched a story about mounting food insecurity to an editor. “Interesting,” the veteran Caribbean reporter said, “maybe go down to that spot in Cité Soleil where they sell mud cakes? Get some color?” The image of poor Haitians eating dirt in the country’s most notorious slum has intermittently […]

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Canadian NGO Launches Campaign to Fund Girls’ Clubs in Swaziland

Canadian NGO Launches Campaign to Fund Girls’ Clubs in Swaziland

Last year, I traveled to Swaziland, a country roughly the size of New Jersey surrounded by South Africa and Mozambique. Swaziland has about 1 million people, and has the unfortunate distinction of having the world’s highest rate of HIV/AIDS, 25.9%, and therefore a life expectancy of 48 years of age. I met an amazing cross […]

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Sucesses in the Fight Against FGM

Sucesses in the Fight Against FGM

Across parts of Africa the following scene is played out on a daily basis. A young girl of only 4 to 12 years old is held down by while she struggles to break free and screams from the excruciating pain that is being inflicted upon her.  The image of a young girl being held down screaming in […]

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Childhood Before Marriage

Childhood Before Marriage

For millions of little girls across the world, childhood is brief.  It is estimated that 10 million girls a year worldwide, the majority in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, are married under the age of 18, some as young as seven or eight.  According to UNICEF, more than 40% of the world’s child marriages occur in India. […]

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Malian Refugees Compound Problems in the Sahel

Malian Refugees Compound Problems in the Sahel

Just as the food crisis and famine in the Horn of Africa becomes manageable for aid groups, another crisis begins on the other side of the continent in the Sahel region of West Africa. On the edges of the Sahara Desert, drought is not uncommon, but is becoming more frequent with major food emergencies in […]

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Stop Playing the Blame Game: Ex Gratia Payments in the Fog of War

Stop Playing the Blame Game: Ex Gratia Payments in the Fog of War

I’m sitting with the father of a young boy killed in a firefight in Afghanistan. His child was eight years old. He told me his story: Just before dawn on February 8th, helicopters carrying dozens of French and Afghan troops landed in a remote village in Kapisa province located in northeastern Afghanistan. The soldiers searched […]

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UNICEF State of the World’s Children Released

UNICEF State of the World’s Children Released

UNICEF has recently published their flagship publication, The State of the World’s Children, which each year examines a key issue affecting children.  Last year’s report,  The State of the World’s Children 2011: Adolescence – An Age of Opportunity, focused on adolescence; this year’s report highlights the shift of the world population to urban areas and […]

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News…

News…

Behind the lines in India’s polio fight In New Delhi, at several of the 7,000 vaccination booths that span the Indian capital, children get two drops of an oral polio vaccine, after which one of their pinkie fingers is painted with indelible purple ink — a procedure that is being repeated across the vast country, […]

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