Margarita Assenova – USA & Bulgaria

Margarita Assenova is a political analyst and journalist, who served as a research consultant for the CSIS Eastern Europe Project.

Margarita Assenova – USA & Bulgaria

Read this interview on ngoCHR about the theme The Commission is too soft on dictatorships.

Accompanying human rights activists to protect them from danger Liam Mahony, Peace Brigades International, USA Peace Brigades International (PBI) sends international observers to accompany human rights activists who are threatened by the government or paramilitary organizations. They serve as a reminder to perpetrators of human rights abuse that the international community is watching. In the event of an abduction, the observer alerts authorities in the country, their own native government and activists around the world. This brings the influence of the foreigner’s government and international contacts to bear on the perpetrators. Although the volunteers are the most visible symbol of the accompaniment tactic, the success of the approach depends on an international awareness of the situation through an extensive support network of concerned individuals and supporting organizations. This network is ready to apply special pressure in crisis situations involving PBI volunteers and the people they are protecting. Through e-mails, faxes and letters sent to authorities in the country in which the crisis is occurring, the recipients are made aware that the eyes of the international community are upon them. In selective situations, PBI also uses a high-level alert network of influential political and diplomatic authorities when it wishes to apply potent pressure. These are people who have especially strong influence on the government authorities in the country concerned. Margarita Assenova is one of them. (Read more on NewTactics).

Read her article Educating the European Way.

Curriculum Clash: Tests show that European schools–even those in economically challenged eastern Europe–produce students who, on average, greatly surpass Americans in academic achievement. This may be due to the more-intensive curricula in place in Europe. The American and European ways stem partially from their respective cultural milieus, the former stressing flexibility and creativity and the latter emphasizing rigor and systematism. (Read more on worldandi).

Read Brookings Unveils UN’s Central Asia Human Development Report.

Read also: Fall issue of Transatlantic « Internationale Politik ».

Book: The Debate on NATO’s Evolution, publisher CSIS, 0-89206-428-5 (pb) – In order to better inform policymakers, as well as students, in the United States and Europe about the context, causes, and consequences of NATO’s evolution, CSIS has conducted a comprehensive survey and analysis of the debate on NATO enlargement since the close of the Cold War and the demise of the Soviet threat. This guidebook is the result of that survey and analysis. It provides an overview of the ongoing debate through condensed descriptions outlining the key factors in NATO’s evolution since the early 1990s. It is meant to serve as a general guide to the various texts, positions, and arguments on that evolution–helpfully framing many of the issues confronting the alliance, issues that will preoccupy Washington and other allied capitals in the years ahead.

Read: The Schengen list impacts on Bulgaria’s elections, by Margarita Assenova.

links:

BosNet;

on Kosovo;

freedomhouse.org, acknowledgements;

RightsConsortium.org;

about Bulgaria;

Click24;

former Stanford fellows;

Fall issue of Transatlantic « Internationale Politik« ;

Find articles;

Eurasianet.org, about Uzbekistan.

Laisser un commentaire

Votre adresse e-mail ne sera pas publiée. Les champs obligatoires sont indiqués avec *