Archive | November, 2009

links for 2009-11-30

30 Nov

Nuhu Ribadu interview on NPR’s Planet Money

24 Nov

Really interesting interview with Nuhu Ribadu, former head of Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, by the NPR Planet Money team. Check it out here.

Climate change and food – The Economist videographic

24 Nov

Food will grow more expensive as the earth warms

links for 2009-11-23

23 Nov

African migrants and their desperate ploy for a better life

22 Nov

From The Sunday Times:

The dawn prayer had begun prematurely in the cold darkness some time after 3am. Clinging to the upturned hull of the Nazar, the fishing boat that had carried the migrants out into the black waters off Tripoli, the survivors had dreamt they were floating west and, by Allah’s divine grace, had come upon the distant green lights of Malta.

For two days they had clung to the oily hull of the ship. Again and again they had slipped backwards into the watery Mediterranean tomb that surrounded them. Each time they had somehow made it back onto the rotten wooden carcass of the boat, using the floating corpses of other would-be migrants to help them climb back.

“Dear God, how many can there be?” whispered the captain of the Libyan coastguard vessel to his deckhand, repeating the words in Berber and Arabic as the high beam on the starboard of the Libyan navy rescue ship drew closer and lit up the remains of the vessel.

Even for experienced mariners, the sight was unforgettable. Pregnant women from Somalia, Nigerian schoolchildren and young Gambian men, dozens of them, bloated and scattered across the sea. On the upturned hull were no more than 10 survivors, all hysterical and weeping, grasping one another for dear life.

By daybreak it emerged that three boats had gone down. The survivors from the Nazar would speak of a blood-red sandstorm at sea and of hundreds slipping from the packed decks into the roaring depths around them. How many were there on each ship, their interrogators enquired.

“Too many,” one survivor claimed. “The boats were so low in the water we had to bail from the shore. At least a hundred crammed cheek to cheek on each vessel, dozens of screaming infants among our number.” Where were they from? “Everywhere. Lagos. Accra. Addis Ababa. Nairobi. Yaounde. Banjul. Dakar.” Where were they heading? “Lampedusa and then Milan, Paris, London. Who knows? To a better life.”

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What can anthropology offer someone who wants to understand money better?

21 Nov

Is a question Keith Hart asks in his concluding post at the ASA blog. A lot, apparently. Check out the post here.

links for 2009-11-21

21 Nov

links for 2009-11-19

19 Nov

THE WIRE – 100 Greatest Quotes

18 Nov

Couldn’t resist posting it.

HT Ta-Nehisi Coates

Join me to enjoy Ayo’s music

18 Nov

Check her out on her website.