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AFRICA: Could Regulation Ease Fears Over Land Grabs?
By Busani Bafana
STOCKHOLM - The 'land rush' across Africa by international investors should be regulated to protect smallholder farmers from deals that could leave them landless and hungry.
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AGRICULTURE-COTE D'IVOIRE: Small-scale Pineapple Growers Want More Support
By Fulgence Zamblé
BONOUA, Côte d'Ivoire - Karim Diabaté, looks questioningly at his vast 20 hectare pineapple plantation in Bonoua in south-eastern Côte d'Ivoire. "I'm asking myself if if I'll get the money I need for in time for the inputs I need and keep my plants going."
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TRADE: Govt’s May Need to Do for Workers What They Did for Banks
By Isolda Agazzi
GENEVA - The finding by the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and the International Labour Organisation (ILO) that the dropping of trade tariffs leads to jobs being lost in the formal sector while informal jobs grow is another confirmation of the adverse consequences of forced trade liberalisation.
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SOUTH AFRICA: "If You Are Landless, You Are Damned"
By Miriam Mannak
CAPE TOWN - A group of small-scale South African farmers has lodged a complaint with the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) against the government, accusing the authorities of not sufficiently assisting small farmers to make a living and therefore undermining their human right to food security.
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AGRICULTURE-ZIMBABWE: "The Rule of Law Just Isn’t There"
By Stanley Kwenda
HARARE - Agriculture used to be Zimbabwe’s economic mainstay but it has been on the decline since 2000 when the ZANU-PF government embarked on a so-called land reform programme that resulted in about 4,000 productive white farmers losing their farms, many to members of the politically connected elite.
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Q&A: Africans Won’t Just Be on Receiving End of Arts and Culture
Christi van der Westhuizen interviews MIKE VAN GRAAN, playwright and activist
CAPE TOWN - Global initiatives have in recent years stressed the contribution that arts and culture can make to development. This has led African and European artists, bureaucrats and policy makers to increasingly confront the unequal relations in North-South cultural and artistic exchanges.
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AFRICA: "Grasp the Benefits of Trade with BRIC Emerging Markets"
By Jedi Ramalapa
JOHANNESBURG - While economists at a prominent South African bank are excited about burgeoning investment by Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC) in Africa, they are vague on the question of the extent to which it will benefit the majority of Africans. Ensuring this, they believe, is the responsibility of African states themselves.
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Q&A: Small Sugar Farmers Not so Sweet on End of Sugar Protocol
Nasseem Ackbarally interviews SALIL ROY, sugar farmer and leader of the Planters’ Reforms Association in Mauritius
PORT LOUIS - The Sugar Protocol enabling developing world sugar farmers to produce for the European market over the past 34 years ended on Sep 30. Among these, the small island state of Mauritius built two major industries -- tourism and textile and clothing – on the back of its sugar sales.
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AFRICA: Climate Change Worsening Farming’s Trade-Related Woes
By Julio Godoy
BERLIN - Numerous research institutes and international organisations agree that climate change will in the short and medium term worsen Africa's agriculture and food production capabilities, unless greenhouse gases emissions (GHE) are substantially reduced and adequate trade and investment policies put in place.
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TRADE: NGOs Welcome EU Vow Not to Push Africa into EPAs
By Isolda Agazzi
GENEVA - Non-governmental organisations have expressed their satisfaction at the European Commission’s declaration that it would not put "undue pressure" on African and other countries to conclude the controversial trade deals called economic partnership agreements (EPAs).
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ENVIRONMENT-SOUTH AFRICA: Opportunities Spring From e-Waste
By Stephanie Nieuwoudt
CAPE TOWN - There was an audible gasp when Kirsten McIntyre told the audience that e-waste is the third fastest growing waste stream in the world, with between 40 and 50 million tons of computers, TVs and washing machines being "thrown away" each year.
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SOUTH AFRICA: New Regulations "Good and Bad" for Black Empowerment
By Marina Penderis
JOHANNESBURG - The first decade of South Africa’s black economic empowerment (BEE) policies saw the creation of a predictable list of politically connected beneficiaries, featuring names such as Patrice Motsepe, Cyril Ramaphosa and Tokyo Sexwale. Now new regulations may see other companies – including white-owned business – enter the BEE stage.
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AFRICA: Stop Rubber Stamping Trade Deals
By Christi van der Westhuizen
CAPE TOWN - Civil society should call African parliaments to account on international trade negotiations as parliamentarians have in the past not been "robust" enough in ensuring that such talks deliver on developmental priorities.
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Africa & Europe: No More Trade-Offs
"Trade, not aid"
for Africa: rarely has a slogan promised more, and delivered less. The continent's share of global trade is miniscule, and a successful conclusion to the latest round of international trade negotiations that might improve matters remains maddeningly elusive.

All doom and gloom, then? Not necessarily.

IPS analyses the problems that prevent Africa from taking its proper place in international trade, especially in terms of its relations with Europe. But our coverage also looks at how things can be done differently -- fair trade practices, for instance -- as well as organisations and motivated individuals who simply refuse to accept the status quo.

EPAs - Opportunities and Risks
Money Matters - Economy, Trade & Finance
News in RSS
Q&A: ‘Creating Artificial Glaciers Is Simple, Easy and Replicable’
INDIA: ‘Glacier Man’ Vows to Build More Artificial Glaciers
US-INDIA: State Visit by Singh Could Smooth Bumpy Relations
PERU: Fighting Hunger with Native Crops
RIGHTS-CHAGOS: 'My Navel is Buried There'
GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
AFGHANISTAN: Insurgents Infiltrate Security Forces
LEBANON: Migrant Women Dying on the Job
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
CLIMATE CHANGE: Health at Risk
More >>
News in RSS
EU SUGAR REFORM A BITTER PILL FOR POORER PRODUCERS
    by David Kleimann


AFRICAN COUNTRIES SHOULD MOVE SLOWLY IN SERVICES TRADE TALKS WITH EU
    by Joy Kategekwa


EUROPE SELF-SERVING IN TRADE TALKS WITH AFRICA
    by Demba Moussa Dembele
Third World Network
Economic Policy Institute
Economic Justice Network
Traidcraft
Global Witness
World Trade Organisation
European Union
Secretariat of the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States
UN Conference on Trade and Development
Oxfam
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