Social Issues

Race and Ethnicity

  • Myanmar
    Myanmar’s Alarming Civil Unrest
    Myanmar’s emergence from military rule has also spawned some of the worst ethnic and religious violence in decades and fear of prolonged civil conflict, writes CFR’s Joshua Kurlantzick.
  • Turkey
    Turkey’s New Year Surprise
    The success of a surprise cease-fire between Turkey and PKK insurgents hinges on Ankara granting the Kurds greater autonomy and whether the militant group disarms, says CFR’s Steven A. Cook.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
    Some Mali Tuaregs Turn Against Radical Islamists
    Reuters is reporting the claim by pro-autonomy Tuareg MNLA rebels that they have seized Mohamed Moussa Ag Mohamed, who imposed harsh Islamist rule on Timbuktu, and Oumeini Ould Baba Akmed, a kidnapper associated with the alleged al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) splinter group MUJWA. An MNLA spokesman says that the two Islamist leaders have been sent to Kidal, but it is not clear what force has custody of them. After the recovery of Timbuktu, Gao, and Kidal, the MNLA appears to be reasserting its leadership in northern Mali, and distancing themselves from the radical Islamists, by emphasizing their demand for autonomy or independence. MNLA says it is willing hunt down Islamists and has offered peace talks with Bamako. Some military officers rejected this offer out of hand, citing claims of rebels executing soldiers. An MNLA spokesman, Ibrahim Ag Assaleh, in turn criticized Bamako’s interim president Dioncounda Traore’s proposal to hold elections on July 31 unless an agreement between north and south is reached first. MNLA’s latest moves highlight the fragility of the Islamist coalition that controlled northern Mali for nine months. Following Captain Amadou Sanogo’s successful military coup against the Bamako government in March 2012, MNLA led the establishment of the independent state of Azawad in northern Mali. However, in a devil’s bargain, MNLA allied itself with radical Islamists groups, including Ansar Dine, AQIM, and MUJWA to drive out Bamako’s army. Under circumstances that remain obscure, the radicals then displaced MNLA and proceeded to impose its harsh Islamist regime, apparently with MNLA’s acquiescence or approval. While this inherently unstable coalition ruled northern Mali, relations between the radical Islamists and MNLA were obscure to outside observers, but they likely remained fluid and influenced by local factors, including rivalry for control of smuggling routes. Now, however, that the Islamists are on the run, MNLA has turned on them and returned to its initial goal of autonomy, if not independence, for northern Mali. This opens up the possibility for talks with Bamako and even the potential for a viable political settlement. But, that will require a credible response by Bamako to this latest MNLA initiative.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
    A Bloody Week for Nigeria
    According to the Nigerian press, security forces in Maiduguri went on a rampage murdering at least thirty people last week following the killing of three soldiers (one an officer) by a bomb.  AP Correspondent Jon Gambrell reports in the New York Times, of the murder of at least twenty-four people on Sunday, October 13, at a village in Kaduna state. The Nigerian press also reports that at least thirty people were killed in a clash between Tiv farmers and Fulani herdsmen in Benue state earlier this week. On Monday October 15, the Nigerian military claimed it had killed at least twenty-four members of Boko Haram in Maiduguri. The Maiduguri incidents appear related to Boko Haram and the security force’s reaction to it. The murders in Kaduna and Benue states appear distinct.  In Kaduna, one explanation for the deaths is that the village was attacked by a criminal gang.  A more plausible explanation is the longstanding conflict between farmers and herdsmen over land use.  In some parts of the Nigerian Middle Belt, farmers are predominantly Christian while herders are Muslim.  In this locality of Kaduna however, the farmers and herders are both Muslim. The violence in Benue appears to be part of a long standing feud between two ethnic groups, and also partly over land use.  However, there is also a religious divide between the Tiv and Fulani.  Tiv are usually Christian while Fulani are Muslim. In both the Kaduna and Benue incidents, the majority of the victims were probably women, children, and the elderly who could not flee. The murders in Kaduna and Benue states appear unrelated to Boko Haram.  Violence related to ethnic and religious rivalries, often with a focus on land use, is a long standing challenge to any Nigerian government. However, the inability of the federal government to control Boko Haram may be encouraging others to take the law into their own hands to settle old scores.    
  • Syria
    What Syria’s Power Struggle Means
    The conflict in Syria is less about democratic reforms and more about redistributing power along sectarian and ethnic lines--with troubling regional implications, says expert Vali Nasr.
  • China
    Uighurs and China’s Xinjiang Region
    As China continues to transform its economy, rising tensions and spates of violence within its primarily Muslim Uighur community is causing regional instability both internally and with Pakistan.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
    Azawad: Africa’s Newest State?
    The Tuareg rebels on April 6 declared their independence from Mali and announced the formation of the state of Azawad. That action was condemned or ignored by the international community. In a thoughtful article, William Moseley, a professor of geography and African studies at Macalester College, puts Azawad in the context of the larger issue of Africa’s colonial borders. He recalls the arbitrary nature of Africa’s borders, most of which were inherited from the colonial period, especially from the 1884-85 Berlin conference. He also recalls the relationship between the Tuareg people and the Mali government, which he characterizes as "uneasy." But, he notes, Azawad was created by force, and that it remains unclear whether it has the widespread support of the inhabitants living within its territory. Then there is the question of what the boundaries of the new state might be. And this political drama is being played out against the backdrop of anticipated famine. Moseley urges dialogue among the Mali government, the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA - the ’government’ of Azawad), and the international community. He suggests that many in the south of Mali may not see the north as worth a war. Should Azawad continue to insist on independence, he suggests that it be countered with force only if the MNLA refuses to follow a democratic process in building the new state. Moseley is right in urging dialogue. But, for now, the Tuareg rebels seem to have most of the cards. They are well-armed and they defeated the earlier efforts of Mali’s government to defeat them, thereby leading to a military coup in Bamako. The restored, constitutional government of Mali is still finding its feet and faces elections. It is hard to imagine a regional force could defeat the Tuaregs in an extraordinarily difficult fighting environment that bridges the Sahel and the Sahara. If it can hold the support or acquiescence of most of the population in the Azawad territory, MNLA is likely to be able to stay in power despite the opposition of the African Union or the Economic Community of West African States. But, the elephant in the living room may be the Sahelian drought. UN agencies and humanitarian organizations are continuing to try to energize the international community to respond to what could be a major tragedy. With respect to Azawad, famine could cut many ways. The MNLA might be unable to feed its people, eroding support for Azawad. On the other hand, the ECOWAS states are likely to be distracted from concerted action on Azawad as they attempt to organize famine relief for their own people.
  • Terrorism and Counterterrorism
    Threat of Homegrown Islamist Terrorism
    An increase in terror incidents involving Islamic radicals who are U.S. citizens is vexing law enforcement officials and posing new questions about the roots of their radicalization.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
    African Immigration and the United States
    African immigrants watch a Carnavale parade in Tapachula February 28, 2009. After months of travel from African nations including Somalia and Ethiopia, the U.S. bound immigrants present themselves to Mexican authorities where they are held and processed for two weeks. (Daniel Leclair/Courtesy Reuters) There is now a significant African-born population in the United States-- about four percent of 38.5 million immigrants. It is newer, younger, and better educated but also poorer than other immigrant groups, as  Kristen McCabe from the Migration Policy Institute notes in her fascinating article “U.S. in Focus: African Immigrants in the U.S.” (It should be noted that her statistics include North Africa and she does not discuss undocumented aliens.) It seems likely to me that their relative poverty reflects their recent arrival; other immigrants include significant numbers who have established themselves in the United States for a long time. Some highlights: from 1980 to 2009, the African-born population in the United States increased from two hundred thousand to 1.5 million, with most immigrants from east and west Africa.  Almost half have arrived since 2000. The top countries of origin were Nigeria, Ethiopia, Egypt, Ghana, and Kenya. Very few have come from southern or central Africa. About one-third live in New York, California, Texas, and Maryland, and about a quarter live in the greater metropolitan areas of New York and Washington. Their English skills and advanced educational levels are generally higher than those of other immigrant groups. In addition, McCabe reports that there are 3.5 million self-identified members of the African Diaspora, a figure that also includes those who are American born. With the U.S. population more than three hundred million (only China and India are larger), the relative size of the African immigrant community is not large. Nevertheless, as African immigrants become U.S. citizens and the Diaspora grows, they may add a distinctive voice to American discourse on international affairs, especially where they are concentrated in specific electoral districts. That could encourage greater American sophistication and understanding of African issues and developments.
  • Race and Ethnicity
    Europe: Integrating Islam
    Western Europe’s burgeoning Islamic population continues to spark concerns about Muslim assimilation and a cultural divide.
  • China
    China’s Brain Drain Gives Way to a Yuan Drain
    An employee seals a stack of yuan banknotes at a branch of Industrial and Commercial Bank of China in Huaibei, Anhui province on April 6, 2011. (Stringer/Courtesy Reuters) China has long acknowledged that it has a problem with its best and brightest leaving the country to study and not returning. According to the Chinese Ministry of Education, only around a quarter of the 1.4 million Chinese students and scholars who have left the country since it opened up to the outside world in the late 1970s have returned. Now with its rapidly growing GDP and burgeoning state coffers, Beijing is in a position to try to turn the situation around. In 2008, it launched its “1000 Talents Program” designed to bring top notch global talent to China. By providing strong financial and research incentives to the some of the world’s leading lights scholars, the program has had some notable successes. It is too early to tell, however, how well these returnees—or foreign talent—will be able to adapt their talents from abroad to the political culture that many of them fled a decade or more ago. Having made a head-start in addressing one of its problems of human capital, Beijing must now gird itself to address another. Even as China seems to be importing back its top academic talent, it appears to be on the brink of losing its top wealth-making talent. According to the Global Times, the 2011 Private Wealth Report, published by China Merchants bank and Bain & Company, indicates that nearly 60 percent of Chinese who have at least 10 million yuan ($1.53 million) in individual assets are either completing the process of emigration or are considering it. Even more surprising, of those Chinese who have profited most from staying home—earners with at least 100 million yuan ($15.3 million) in investment assets—27 percent have already left China and an additional 47 percent are thinking about it.  The stated reasons behind their departure include education for their children, pensions, and general insecurity. These Chinese may not be taking to the streets, but they are still voting with their feet—or perhaps more accurately, with their pockets.
  • International Organizations
    Bachelet: Empowering Women Country By Country
    Michelle Bachelet, Executive Director of UN Women and former president of Chile, discusses the empowerment of women around the world with CFR’s Director of Studies, James Lindsay. Bachelet emphasizes the importance of contextualizing the support provided in each country, and the need to combine both top-down and bottom-up approaches.
  • Asia
    The Death of Vang Pao
    Shawn Xiong and thousands of Hmong protest the case against Gen. Vang Pao in Sacramento, California May 11, 2009. (Max Whittaker/Courtesy Reuters) Last week, Vang Pao, who led the Hmong forces in the “secret war” in Laos during the Vietnam conflict, passed away near his home in Fresno, California. Vang Pao was a complicated figure – a truly brave fighter whose men helped American forces significantly during the Vietnam War, and during his time in the United States after he emigrated to America, a leader of the Hmong community, which faced as many obstacles in adjusting to American society as any immigrant group ever has. But, especially later in his life, Vang Pao also became an extremely divisive figure within the Hmong community in the United States, as Hmong-Americans, like many émigré communities, fought within themselves over whether to keep a dream alive of returning to Laos, and as Vang Pao, wittingly or not, allowed himself to be used for all number of schemes. I had a chance to interview Vang Pao several years ago, during Hmong New Year celebrations in St. Paul, Minnesota. You can find the article from the New Republic here (unfortunately for subscribers only).
  • Kashmir
    Solving the Kashmir Conundrum
    As violence surges in Indian-administered Kashmir, four experts say confidence-building measures between India and Pakistan are the only way to begin solving the territorial dispute.
  • India
    India’s Rise: The Role of the Diaspora
    My long-standing friendship with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh began when we were both students in Cambridge in the mid-1950s. One personal anecdote in particular underlines dramatically why the Indian diaspora has a critical role to play in the country’s present and future. Recall that the Indian policy framework had degenerated into an unproductive, even counterproductive, set of policy choices that had produced the abysmal growth rate of approximately 3.5 percent per annum over nearly a quarter of a century. With an average population growth at 2 percent per annum, that translated into a per capita growth of roughly 1.5 percent per annum! We can readily see that, compared to the growth rate at 7-8 percent per annum which countries in East Asia had registered (and which our reforms have led to since the reforms began in earnest in 1991), we had lost growth by roughly 4 percent percentage points annually and that our income level would have been 2.5 times larger than in 2010 if only we had registered this higher growth throughout the last 45 years rather than only after the 1991 reforms. We would have been at the center of world attention far more dramatically, and indeed sooner. The slow growth of the Indian economy had also undermined the assault on poverty that had been our central objective since planning began in 1951. It is only commonsense that a stagnant economy cannot pull people out from poverty through job creation, even though a growing economy may still not create enough jobs. So, when we failed to grow, we also failed to make a serious dent on poverty. It is not that we were wedded to growth per se and did not pay attention to poverty. Growth was in fact regarded correctly by us at the time as the principal way to make a sustained impact on poverty. The problem was that our pre-reform policies had failed to generate the growth. While the external payments crisis in 1991 was the occasion for changes that would systematically begin to discard the policy framework that had failed to increase growth and to diminish poverty, the fact that we did not lapse back into it after we had surmounted the immediate crisis underscores the fact that thoughtful Indians had finally understood that we just could not go on the way we had, that change was necessary. Needless to say, the ceaseless writings of economists such as myself, going back to the 1960s, had made an impact. In the end, our arguments had prevailed against the fierce anti-reform orthodoxy among the economists, including our most eminent ones. But Prime Minister Singh told me that an important part had also been played by the diaspora. He told me that, when he was spearheading the reforms as the Finance Minister, Prime Minister Narasimha Rao had lent his full support largely because many members of his own family who were abroad had told him that India’s policies made no sense and that they had diminished our standing in the world. Coming from his own family’s immediate experience abroad, the message carried great salience and cemented the resolve of the Prime Minister to pull India out of the rut into which it had fallen. The Diaspora as Contributor to Our Reforms Indeed, the policymaking elites were finally shocked into the reforms by two factors that acted like a pincer movement against the status quo. First, these elites increasingly experienced, at first hand when they went abroad, the disjunction between their sense of India’s ancient culture and glory and their realization that our foolish economic policies had led to a situation where few took us seriously. The worst kind of psychological situation is where you have a superiority complex and an inferior status! Second, our diaspora ceaselessly brought home to these elites the fact that these policies had little rationale; they lived often in countries where our policies would have been laughed out of court. I recall writing an op-ed in the New York Times when Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was coming to the United States and I had mentioned how he represented a force for change and how the licensing system had been softened to allow for product diversification. The Times editor asked me what that meant; and I explained how the Indian licensing system had gone so far as to insist on specifying whether one produced knives or forks! The editor was incredulous: how could anyone think that good planning meant that one could not diversify production without permission? I, a member of the diaspora, did mention this at the time to several friends in the Indian government, to their chagrin. Indeed, over time, the flood of such stories coming from the diaspora helped to lay the groundwork for the abolition of the senseless licensing restrictions on capacity creation, product diversification, on import competition, that became part of the liberal reforms. In the case of Japan, its transformation through major initiatives throughout the Meiji era was accomplished rather by sending gifted Japanese abroad to bring back ideas that were adapted to Japan’s culture and needs. In our case, the diaspora has served that function. The Diaspora’s Achievements Abroad Contribute to India’s Image But the diaspora has also contributed to India’s achievement of world-class status by its achievements in a variety of fields of science, arts and culture. Noting this growing trend in the United States, I once remarked that we were the next Jews of America: a high-achieving diaspora that would soon dominate the scene as the Jews, once discriminated against brutally, had managed to do. Today, that forecast has come true. Not a day goes past when there is not a story in the major media of some notable scientific breakthrough where an Indian is a lead player. Our achievers have also made it in literature, music and films: Salman Rushdie, Zubin Mehta and Mira Nair are household names. In business, the Silicon Valley and Wall Street CEOs like Vikram Pandit are as often Indian as they are Chinese and American natives. The media also now have stars like Fareed Zakaria and Tunku Varadarajan. Just as the Chinese have changed their traditional image as laundry operators in the United States, and one thinks instead of major architects like I.M. Pei and stellar musicians like the cellist Yo-yo Ma, we are no longer represented by the Eastern gurus like the free-love-celebrating Rajneesh - once, when I was in Pune where Rajneesh had an Ashram, the hotel had a poster which said: "Disco Dance Tonight: For Sanyasins Only" - and the dimpled Deepak Chopra who has splendid lines like: “You may think I am standing before you; but it is only a bunch of molecules” which make witless middle-aged Americans reach for their purses. These were the dispensers of revenge on the West by the East as brilliantly portrayed in her penetrating essays in Karma Cola by Gita Mehta. No longer are they anything but boutique operators on the fringes, jostling for the America dollars with the Moonies. Today, therefore, in place of snake charmers, we charm the American public with our splendid achievements. We have also demonstrated that, if only we are given the chance and the opportunity, we can work our way to the top: a possibility that the United States, a land made by immigrants which welcomes immigrants more than any other country, offers us in spades. This too has reinforced the lesson that the diaspora has offered us directly through instruction: clearly, there was nothing special about India that doomed it to its low growth rate, not its size, not its culture, not its geography, not its history. The problem lay in our choice of wrong policies; when the policies were good, Indians could perform at the most enviable levels, second to none. The diaspora’s astonishing performance gave us therefore the shot in the arm, the confidence that had been lost by many as we sank into failure until our reforms began.