Wednesday, January 12, 2011

3 ideas for issues facing St. Louis

1. Combine the city with the county to make a larger population city. Could lower the "most dangerous city in America rating" because there is less crime in the county.

2. Development projects for the North side of the city. Remodel abandoned buildings to create new housing and attract new residents to the city.

3. Public transit cuts in the city and county. Some are afraid of crime coming into the county on the buses / metrolink, but it adds to property values.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Potential Topic for Human Rights Conference Project

I am interested in the book, Unspeakable Acts, Ordinary People: The Dynamics of Torture, by John Conroy which details three acts of torture in three different countries with three different circumstances.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Current Events in the Congo

Over the past year in the Congo, the news has been focused on the UN findings in regards to Rwandan genocide in the Congo. The two articles that I found are dealing with this topic. The first has to do with people in the Congo being taught to be CSIs and examining mass graves from the Rwandan killings of Hutu refugees. The UN report stated that Rwandan forces, sent by President Kagame, killed tens of thousands of Hutu refugees fleeing from Rwanda into the Congo. The second article is about the release of the UN report detailing the Rwandan genocide in the Congo, and the reaction of the Rwandan people and government. "The report by the UN human rights commission calls for a judicial investigation of possible war crimes after cataloguing years of murders, rapes and looting by various armed forces during a decade of conflict in Congo from 1993." Rwandan people demonstrated outside of the UN building in Geneva, Switzerland to protest their displeasure about the report. They are upset because they believe that the UN is lying and that they didn't do anything.

Questions-
Did Rwandans really commit genocide and kill Hutu refugees?
Is the UN report accurate in its findings?
If so, what should be done with those findings? What punishment for Rwandans?
What good will come from the report?
Could it do more harm than good by ending the peace in the Congo?

Articles-
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/sep/12/congo-forensic-scientists-hutu-genocide
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/oct/01/un-report-rwanda-congo-genocide

Monday, September 20, 2010

Response to KLG small seminar 1

The idea or question that I have lingering after the small group seminar is the impact that Leopold's actions have on the Congo. In particular, elephant populations, the African people, and his agents living there.

I believe that our small group discussion was great. We were all able to put in our thoughts and there was no talking over each other or struggles to get my point in. I don't think that there is much we can improve on because this was one of the best discussions that I have ever been in.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Response to first section of King Leopold's Ghost

I found the first section to be very intriguing and I learned a lot about the early expeditions to Africa and the Congo river. I was interested in the jump from educating, in both schooling and religion, the people of Africa to enslaving them and taking their resources. One person that I found very interesting was Affonso who was one of the first Africans to learn Portuguese and he dictated many letters, which still exist today.

Two questions that I have are...
Why does and when does Henry Morton Stanley go back to Africa?
How, when, and by who was the Congo region divided out into separate countries?