Home > English > Alternatives International Journal > 2009 > Ides of May 2009
Ides of May 2009
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Attached documents
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Vol.2, Iss.1
(PDF - 5.9 MiB)
Alternatives International Journal: The Ides of May
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Vol.2, Iss.1
(PDF - 5.9 MiB)
Articles
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4 June 2009, by Michael Ryan Wiseman
If You Think In Terms Of A Year, Plant A Seed
Ohh, seed money. I only caught the first part. I have never understood why people make such a production about birthdays. On the face of it they are utterly meaningless, mere symbols; (…) -
4 June 2009, by Herbert Jauch
Kind of a BIG Deal
Namibia, a vast country inhabited by two million people, is one of the smaller economies in Southern Africa. It adopted a market-based economic system after achieving independence from (…) -
4 June 2009, by Myriam Cloutier
The Little Engine That Couldn’t
Quick, send in the clowns. Don’t bother, they’re here. Railway Privatization in Senegal and Mali More than five years after the management of the railway connecting Dakar, the capital of (…) -
4 June 2009, by Sally Richmond
Balancing The Scales
Rather than getting squeezed by conventional trade, thousands of artisans and farmers around the world will have enough money to provide their families with food, shelter, education, and (…) -
4 June 2009, by Ceyda Turan
Not Another Brick in the Wall
Class in session: Sakena Yacoobi drops some knowledge— and inspiration—on the IHSP. Sakena Yacoobi founded the Afghan Institute of Learning (AIL), in 1995 to “help address the problem of (…) -
4 June 2009, by Bruce Campbell
The ’O9 Canadian Government Herring
Rust-Proofing Optional It is now abundantly clear that Canada and the world is facing its worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. However, a sense of premature Hoover-type (…) -
4 June 2009, by Ali Chabuk
You Can Never Go Home Again
The Crimean Tatars are a Turkic people who inhabited the Crimean peninsula— now a part of Ukraine— for over seven centuries. They established their own Khanate in the 1440s and remained an (…) -
4 June 2009, by Michael Ryan Wiseman
:Peruvian Graffiti
AIJ’s MR Wiseman recently read the handwriting on the wall. It belonged to artist-at-large :Peru. For a free trip, go to www.peru143.com and explore all of his creations. Your most recent (…)