Les sanctions occidentales imposées à la Russie mettent du temps à affecter l’économie de guerre du pays, a indiqué le ministre letton Andris Sprūds lors d’un entretien accordé à Euractiv, alors que l’UE prépare l’adoption d’un 20e paquet de mesures commerciales contre Moscou.
The post Ukraine : les sanctions contre Moscou n’entraîneront pas une fin rapide de la guerre, selon le ministre letton de la Défense appeared first on Euractiv FR.
Alors que l’aide publique au développement fait face à une contraction sans précédent, entre coupes budgétaires annoncées, montée des urgences humanitaires et aggravation des crises de la dette, les débats sur son efficacité se réactivent. Depuis vingt ans, les réformes impulsées par la Déclaration de Paris ont profondément transformé les pratiques : aide plus ciblée, projets évalués, redevabilité accrue et partenariat renforcé avec les pays récipiendaires. Pourtant, la baisse des financements menace ces acquis, au moment même où les besoins structurels (éducation, santé, adaptation climatique) n’ont jamais été aussi élevés. Entre impératifs de court terme, risques de dépendance, fragilité institutionnelle et arbitrages imposés par le surendettement, un dilemme se pose : comment préserver une aide efficace, soutenable et tournée vers le long terme, lorsque les moyens se réduisent, que les urgences s’accumulent et que les créanciers privés jouent un rôle grandissant dans les négociations ?
À téléchargerL’article L’aide publique au développement : à la recherche de durabilité et d’efficacité dans un contexte de crises multiples est apparu en premier sur IRIS.
Comme chaque hiver, le Kosovo doit importer de l'énergie. Ses deux centrales thermiques vieillissantes ne peuvent pas couvrir ses besoins, et le petit pays a pris beaucoup de retard dans le domaine des énergies renouvelables. Avec l'éolien et le solaire, il a pourtant une carte à jouer.
- Articles / Radio Evropa e Lirë, Kosovo, Economie, Environnement, Énergie Balkans, Balkans pollution atmosphériqueOne of the hallmarks of colonization was transplantation of the European nation-state to the colonies in line with colonialism’s consideration of sedentarism as indispensable to its ‘civilization’ by domination mission. The structuring of space and belonging around the Eurocentric notion of nationhood and statehood became the vehicle through which populations in the colonized parts of the world were reconfigured as insiders and outsiders as well as legal and illegal among other designations. This chapter addresses the Eurocentric configuration of space around the nation-state, its reproduction in the colony and post-colony and the implications for contemporary global mobility. Building on Michel Foucault’s (1986) heterotopic spaces and Freerk Boedeltje’s (2012) discussion of the structuring of space around the ‘normal’/‘deviant’ binary, the chapter argues that this dichotomous dissection of space inscribes varied texts on mobile bodies and creates hierarchies that bestow varied identities and differential mobility opportunities on people who inhabit different spaces. The Eurocentric structuring of space construes mobility as anomalous and straining the hyphen in nation-state through its disruption of the order created around sedentarism and spatial demarcation of belonging. The chapter highlights how the nation-state attaches belonging to space in ways that restrain mobility particularly by ‘othered’ bodies from ‘deviant’ spaces. It illustrates its main argument by discussing the tethering of belonging to space exemplified by physical and legal barriers buttressed by securitizing discourses that seek to deter presumably transgressive mobilities’ ‘encroachment’ into spaces where they are ostensibly anomalous.
One of the hallmarks of colonization was transplantation of the European nation-state to the colonies in line with colonialism’s consideration of sedentarism as indispensable to its ‘civilization’ by domination mission. The structuring of space and belonging around the Eurocentric notion of nationhood and statehood became the vehicle through which populations in the colonized parts of the world were reconfigured as insiders and outsiders as well as legal and illegal among other designations. This chapter addresses the Eurocentric configuration of space around the nation-state, its reproduction in the colony and post-colony and the implications for contemporary global mobility. Building on Michel Foucault’s (1986) heterotopic spaces and Freerk Boedeltje’s (2012) discussion of the structuring of space around the ‘normal’/‘deviant’ binary, the chapter argues that this dichotomous dissection of space inscribes varied texts on mobile bodies and creates hierarchies that bestow varied identities and differential mobility opportunities on people who inhabit different spaces. The Eurocentric structuring of space construes mobility as anomalous and straining the hyphen in nation-state through its disruption of the order created around sedentarism and spatial demarcation of belonging. The chapter highlights how the nation-state attaches belonging to space in ways that restrain mobility particularly by ‘othered’ bodies from ‘deviant’ spaces. It illustrates its main argument by discussing the tethering of belonging to space exemplified by physical and legal barriers buttressed by securitizing discourses that seek to deter presumably transgressive mobilities’ ‘encroachment’ into spaces where they are ostensibly anomalous.
One of the hallmarks of colonization was transplantation of the European nation-state to the colonies in line with colonialism’s consideration of sedentarism as indispensable to its ‘civilization’ by domination mission. The structuring of space and belonging around the Eurocentric notion of nationhood and statehood became the vehicle through which populations in the colonized parts of the world were reconfigured as insiders and outsiders as well as legal and illegal among other designations. This chapter addresses the Eurocentric configuration of space around the nation-state, its reproduction in the colony and post-colony and the implications for contemporary global mobility. Building on Michel Foucault’s (1986) heterotopic spaces and Freerk Boedeltje’s (2012) discussion of the structuring of space around the ‘normal’/‘deviant’ binary, the chapter argues that this dichotomous dissection of space inscribes varied texts on mobile bodies and creates hierarchies that bestow varied identities and differential mobility opportunities on people who inhabit different spaces. The Eurocentric structuring of space construes mobility as anomalous and straining the hyphen in nation-state through its disruption of the order created around sedentarism and spatial demarcation of belonging. The chapter highlights how the nation-state attaches belonging to space in ways that restrain mobility particularly by ‘othered’ bodies from ‘deviant’ spaces. It illustrates its main argument by discussing the tethering of belonging to space exemplified by physical and legal barriers buttressed by securitizing discourses that seek to deter presumably transgressive mobilities’ ‘encroachment’ into spaces where they are ostensibly anomalous.
Les dirigeants européens tenteront d’afficher une position commune ce jeudi 12 février lors d’un sommet organisé dans un château en Belgique consacré à la relance de l’économie du bloc. Toutefois, même la Commission européenne semble avoir renoncé à réduire les divergences persistantes entre Paris et Berlin.
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