Category Archives: Burkina Faso

DJ Arafat from Cote d’Ivoire

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Chidinma – Kedike

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Elie Justin Ouédraogo on the EITI process in Burkina Faso

A classic EITI obfuscation: the issue is what the government does with the money, and not whether the mining sector is being taxed too lightly. S : La transparence est très recommandée dans le secteur minier. Où en est-on avec … Continue reading

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Zéphirin Diabré on gold mining in Burkina Faso

Somewhat disappointing that he appears unprepared (he doesn’t seem to know that Burkina already has a 10% ownership stake in industrial mines according to the mining code).  And he seems not to have read the EITI reports (which show an … Continue reading

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Soungalo Ouattara élu président de la 5e législature

The big fear was that somehow the president’s brother Francois would be elected president of the National Assembly right away.  The post is important because it is next in line to the President of the Republic.  But Ouattara is definitely … Continue reading

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Zéphirin Diabré sounds like a Republican moralizer here

I wish I knew more about what he has in mind, exactly.  Burkina Faso has more divorced people, and kids of divorced parents maybe suffer some psychological traumas… but are those traumas greater than growing up in a home without … Continue reading

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Zéphirin Diabré the man of the hour in Burkina Faso

Diabré is a former deputy of the National Assembly in the 1990s, a Minister of Finance, he then served a time at UNDP, and also the French nuclear group Areva.  He was a fellow for a year at Harvard (where … Continue reading

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Hijab and self-image

Perusing the catalog of a children’s publisher Kalimat in Emirates, suddenly realized that almost none of the women and girls depicted were wearing head scarves.  Says something about what professional women want their children to think is “normal”: no head … Continue reading

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Make cracks about Stata, you gotta listen then to original Grog Moin from Haiti, and a cute dance version!

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Transposing and reshaping with string in Stata

stata transpose string variable without xpose « Economics should be open. http://www.stata.com/help.cgi?xpose http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/stata/modules/reshapel.htm

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Basic reinforcement of personhood for adolescent girls in West Africa

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Ross Douthat and Tyler Cowen need to read Sinclair Lewis’ Main Street

I am reading Sinclair Lewis’ Main Street, over the last few days, and I could swear one of the characters in the small town of Gopher Prairie, about which Lewis feels so ambivalent, mouths exactly Douthat’s lament… and that was … Continue reading

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Cell phones make people feel bad

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How to understand African economies like that of Burkina Faso

National statistics tell one part of the story, and Burkina Faso’s GDP per capita has been fairly steadily growing at about 2% per year for 20 years (but starting at a $500 per person base, that means the country is … Continue reading

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“Bull” by Mo Yan

I just read the story, by 2012 Nobel prize winner Mo Yan, last night.  Pretty riveting, but also hard to understand without the full context.  You wonder about how much is working as a broad allegory (and what it might … Continue reading

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To my peeps in the Bay Area… Rainy Day Dream Away

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Ouattara dissolves Ivorian government over marriage law: must be more to story than this

Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara has sacked his government in a row over a new marriage law which would make wives joint heads of the household.  Mr Ouattara’s party supported the changes but the members of the ruling coalition were … Continue reading

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Geranium Cat’s Bookshelf: Thursbitch by Alan Garner

Thursbitch feels very much like a sequel to Red Shift to me, although the only connection is the intensity of its sense of place, and a setting geographically close, since Garner likes to write about the area around his home. … Continue reading

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Inestimable Susan Straight, author of short-story “Mines” with a timely opinion piece

SOMETIMES life is like a fun-house mirror, the glass and then the real thing. I had just watched the TV show “The New Normal,” a comedy about what used to be called untraditional families, for the first time, and the … Continue reading

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