Digital Africa
How smartphones are changing a continent.
How smartphones are changing a continent.
J.M. Ledgard Intelligent Life Mar 2011 20min Permalink
The surreal afterlife of the once-ascendant Dubai, where “the legacy of oil has made everything worthless.”
A. A. Gill Vanity Fair Apr 2011 Permalink
A first-person account of the author’s time spent volunteering with a group of Burmese activists in Thailand, who turn out to be not Korean but in fact Karen, members of Burma’s persecuted ethnic minority. In the course of her time there, they show her videos of their risky forays across the border, and she shows them MySpace.
Mac McClelland Mother Jones Apr 2011 40min Permalink
The perilous routes through which information—video footage, secret documents, radio broadcasts—flow in and out of North Korea through its porous borders with China.
Robert S. Boynton The Atlantic Apr 2011 15min Permalink
After nearly 15 years in a Peruvian prison, an American woman convicted of aiding a Marxist terrorist group finds parole in Lima full of contradictions.
First-person accounts from the 2004 siege of a Russian school in Beslan by Chechen terrorists.
C.J. Chivers Esquire Mar 2007 Permalink
One of most popular Libyan figures amongst Western intellectuals and democracy advocates is… Qaddafi’s second son, Saif.
Eliza Griswold The New Republic Jul 2010 15min Permalink
A profile of Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, the Malibu-dwelling, “fantastically corrupt” dictator-in-waiting of Equatorial Guinea. Teodorin, as his friends call him, is considered by U.S. intelligence to be “an unstable, reckless idiot.”
Ken Silverstein Foreign Policy Mar 2011 Permalink
Twenty-five years later, inside the Exclusion Zone.
Henry Shukman Outside Mar 2011 25min Permalink
A suitcase was smuggled from Spain to Mexico during the Spanish Civil War containing negatives from three photographers would later become legends and all die in war zones. The suitcase disappeared.
Dan Kaufman The Nation Jan 2011 Permalink
On Colonel Muammar Qaddafi, “the permanent revolutionary,” and his son Seif.
Andrew Solomon New Yorker May 2006 55min Permalink
What Egypt learned from the students who overthrew Milosevic. “The Serbs are not the usual highly paid consultants in suits from wealthy countries; they look more like, well, cocky students. They bring a cowboy swagger. They radiate success. Everyone they teach wants to do what the Serbs did.”
Tina Rosenberg Foreign Policy Feb 2011 Permalink
The Ugandan rebel Lord’s Resistance Army, drawn mostly from kidnapped children, has proved as elusive as it is barbaric.
Graeme Wood The National (Abu Dhabi) Apr 2010 15min Permalink
The story of three months spent training reporters in Saudi Arabia, where the press is far from free. “I suspected that behind the closed gates of Saudi society there was a social revolution in the making. With some guidance, I thought, these journalists could help inspire change.”
Lawrence Wright New Yorker Jan 2004 Permalink
An opinion piece on the structural causes of unrest in Egypt; the business fraternity, globalization, and the fate of Egyptian women.
Paul Amar Al-Jazeera English Feb 2011 Permalink
On the Cairo knifing of 82-year-old Nobel Prize winner Naguib Mahfouz and its aftermath.
Mary Anne Weaver New Yorker Jan 1995 55min Permalink
February 1st, 2011. Tahrir Square, Cairo.
Yasmine El Rashidi New York Review of Books Feb 2011 15min Permalink
Reporting from Kuwait on the week of its liberation, a brutal account of the atrocities committed during seven months of Iraqi occupation.
Michael Kelly The New Republic Mar 1991 15min Permalink
From the Greeks to George Lucas, 2,200 years of failure.
Becky Ferreira The Awl Feb 2011 25min Permalink
How a nation went bankrupt. “Ireland’s regress is especially unsettling because of the questions it raises about Ireland’s former progress: even now no one is quite sure why the Irish suddenly did so well for themselves in the first place.”
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Mar 2011 Permalink
How a legally dubious FBI sting lured a pair of Russian hackers stateside.
Brendan I. Koerner Legal Affairs May 2002 15min Permalink
Money from relatives abroad, the lifeline for many Afghani’s, moves primarily through small hawala</em exchanges, which shift currency through cellphones, fax lines, and trust. When money moves in Afghanistan, however, connections to the heroin trade and terrorist groups are never far.
Kara Platoni East Bay Express Oct 2003 25min Permalink
A primer on Egypt’s political landscape.
Adam Shatz London Review of Books May 2010 30min Permalink
What happened when the founder of North Face and Esprit bought a chunk of Chile the size of a small state, intending to live with a select group inside it and turn it case study for ecological preservation. It turned out, however, that Chileans didn’t really like that idea.
William Langewiesche The Atlantic Jun 1999 20min Permalink
On the illusion of the inevitable and the revolutions that ended the Eastern Bloc.
Timothy Garton Ash New York Review of Books Nov 2009 20min Permalink