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Are We Losing More Than We Are Gaining?

A recent news article reported that the Lochness monster was photographed in England's Lake District on the cell phone of a 24 year old Briton. Is it possible that cell phone technology finally solves the mystery that has been kept alive through numerous sightings since 1933?

The Tenth Parallel – Book Review

Christianity and Islam share a fifteen hundred year history in the heart of Africa, which began in 615 AD when Prophet Mohammed sent dozens of his followers to Abyssinia (modern day Ethiopia) to find refuge. Within a decade of his death more Muslims fled east across the Nile to settle in parts of southern Sudan and as far as Timbuktu, along the tenth parallel. Today, this line of latitude, 700 miles north of the equator, is home to 60 per cent of the world's Christians and 75 per cent Muslims, across Africa and Asia alone. Here, along this fault line, in the crowded cities and tenements of Asia, and the insect infested jungles of Africa, the two religions meet and clash, continuously shaping the others future.

Pakistan’s Green Threat: Extremism and Political Islam

On the 4th of January 2011, the Governor of Punjab-Pakistan, Salman Taseer, was assassinated by his own elite forces bodyguard, Malik Mumtaz Hussein Qadri. Taseer was shot 26 times with a sub-machine gun as he returned to his car after meeting a friend for lunch at Kohsar market in Islamabad.

Carbon Opportunities in the Gulf

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, in particular Qatar and the UAE, rank among the world's worst performing countries in terms of per capita carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. Perturbed by the increasing international concern, these countries have now announced plans to reduce emissions. As a result, the region could emerge as a hub of clean technology and renewable energy in the future. It may also benefit from the emerging carbon trading system.

Something Old, Something New-Water Conservation in Rajasthan

In the past few years, the state of Rajasthan in India has seen its poor water fortunes aided in part by the revival of traditional and ancient water conservation systems.

Rise of Women Entrepreneurs in Bangladesh

Ten years ago, a majority of the women workers in Bangladesh worked in the informal sector. They were mostly unpaid and did not contribute directly to formal economic activities. However, the demographic structure of the labour participation in Bangladesh is witnessing a remarkable change. An increasing number of women are working in the formal sector as entrepreneurs and paid workers, a situation that was not seen in the past. This gradual transformation of women's participation from the informal to the formal sectors has resulted in an upward mobility in the social and economic status of women, especially that of poor women in the country