Jul 14, 2012

Labouring for development

Labouring for development:

Working-class women, especially domestic workers, have borne much of the burden of achieving Indonesia’s middle-income country status

Michele Ford

ford1.jpg

Working-class women bear the brunt in an unequal society
Michele Ford
Their labour force participation rate may still lag well behind that of Indonesian men, but Indonesian women have increasingly made the shift from traditional forms of economic activity to waged work. At a time when the green revolution and increased mechanisation of wet rice agriculture had eliminated many of the tasks traditionally undertaken by rural women, foreign investors began establishing the factories that drew a generation of young women away from the villages into the urban industrial workforce for the first time. Although many working-class women are engaged in informal sector activities like petty trade, millions now occupy low-skilled positions in the light manufacturing industries – particularly in garments and footwear, the industries that have underpinned Indonesia’s foray into export-oriented industrialisation.
Changes in the economy as a result of the subsequent growth of tertiary industries also created new white-collar opportunities for women, who are now well represented in professional and technical occupations. Overall, in 2010, women comprised around 36 per cent of Indonesia’s workforce of almost 113 million. The percentage was much higher among the university educated in paid employment, where women account for over 46 per cent.
The experiences of working class and middle class women could not be more different. Indonesian working women of all classes

Read more...

Finding ecological justice for women

Finding ecological justice for women:

As Indonesia’s rural poor are increasingly threatened by dispossession, is it time to adopt a more radical agenda for women and the environment?

Rebecca Elmhirst

elmhirst1.jpg

Fisherwomen are hard-hit by environmental degradation in West Sumatra.
Rebecca Elmhirst
During International Women’s Day this year, women representing four of Indonesia’s leading environmental and agrarian NGOs called for women across the archipelago to unite and demand a more just and environmentally sustainable economic order. In a joint statement, representatives from WALHI (the Indonesian Forum for the Environment), the Indonesian Peasants Union (SPI), Indonesian Green Union (SHI) and People's Coalition for Fisheries Justice (KIARA) argued that as women bear the brunt of environmental problems, it is women who should take the lead in preventing or solving them.
While women’s NGOs have tended to focus on issues such as health, economic empowerment and domestic violence, this statement is indicative of a new effort to link women with environmental and social justice agendas. This new alliance is inspired by the radical values of ecofeminism, according to which the exploitation of women and the environment is inextricably linked to the capitalist economic system. But at the same time this is just one of an array of competing agendas currently being promoted in Indonesia which attempt to connect women with the environment in a variety of ways.

Women and environmental crises

WALHI, SPI, SHI and KIARA’s joint statement echoes successive reports documenting how women have been disproportionately affected

Read more...

Reality or just rhetoric?

Reality or just rhetoric?:

The Indonesian government has come a long way when it comes to legislating for gender mainstreaming, but not enough has changed in terms of development practice

Nurul Ilmi Idrus

idrus1.jpg

Mostly women attend a meeting at the Bureau for the Empowerment of Women and Family Planning
Koleksi Badan Pemberdayaan Perempuan dan Keluarga Berencana, Provinsi Sulawesi Selatan
The term ‘gender’ has become part of the every day vocabulary of Indonesian policy-makers. But most of them don’t really know what it means. When they talk about gender mainstreaming in development, they usually mean some kind of women’s empowerment initiative. As a result, gender mainstreaming tends to be thought of in terms of programs for women. This approach results in the establishment of separate programs or a dedicated component for women in a broader project. This ‘add women and stir’ method is a long-established one in the international development community, but one whose time is long gone.
The gender mainstreaming approach recognises that both women and men benefit from the systematic inclusion of a gender perspective in planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of development policies and programs. In theory, it is very different from women’s empowerment programs in terms of its scope, the actors involved, and its impact. In terms of its scope, the women’s empowerment programs of the past were very much at the periphery, while gender mainstreaming is positioned at the centre. In terms of actors, all bureaucrats at

Read more...

Is state ibuism still relevant?

Is state ibuism still relevant?:

The New Order may have fallen, but women’s roles are still being manipulated for political purposes

Julia Suryakusuma

suryakusuma1.jpg
In authoritarian contexts, the state seeks to control its subjects and deploy them to support regime goals. Indonesia’s New Order, often labelled an ‘authoritarian developmentalist’ regime, prioritised economic development. Politics was therefore seen as a risk to national stability, which the regime saw as a prerequisite for that development. Making up half of the population, women – including poor women – were depoliticised and mobilised to support the New Order’s developmentalist goals through a series of highly interventionist state institutions.
Under Suharto’s New Order, a corrupt and oppressive state therefore came to dominate all aspects of life – including the social construction of womanhood. In 1988, I wrote an MA thesis about this, called ‘State Ibuism: the Social Construction of Womanhood in New Order Indonesia’. The first gendered analysis of the New Order, the thesis was an attempt to look at the inappropriateness for poor village women of state-engineered programs imbued with middle-class values. In it, I argued that while women were not taken into account in formal politics, the social and political engineering of women was, in fact, an integral part of the New Order State’s stranglehold on Indonesian society. The dominant gender ideology defined women as wives and mothers, as epitomised in Dharma Wanita, the state-sanctioned organisation for civil servants’ wives. In the formal hierarchy of this

Read more...

Loans for change

Loans for change:

A little help can go a long way when it comes to helping poor women to get ahead

Joanne Morton

morton1.jpg

Ibu Yuliana collects cassava for breakfast every morning
Joanne Morton
Ibu Yuliana and her family live in the rural village of Lempo in Tana Toraja. Her days remain busy even though her four adult children now live away from home. She and her husband are subsistence farmers, and grow their own rice, coffee and vegetables. They produce enough to put food on the table but seldom enough to make a profit, so they rely on their eldest son to send them money to supplement their income. Like most of Indonesia’s low income population, this means that it is almost impossible for them to save money to cover large expenditures such as education for all their children.
But things looked up for Ibu Yuliana last year when she was among a group of women who received a National Program for Community Empowerment (PNPM) loan from the local government. Most micro credit programs focus on income-generating activities, but PNPM loans are very flexible. Ibu Yuliana used her share to finance home improvements and pay her three daughters’ fees at a local university. She then pays back the loan from the money she receives from her son every two months.

The PNPM program

PNPM is a national government program that was initiated in 2007 with the aim of alleviating poverty through

Read more...

Because women deserve better

Because women deserve better:

Two non-profit organisations work together to help women headed households break out of the poverty cycle

Cindy Nawilis

nawilis1.jpg

A Pekka member in Lombok tests out a solar-powered light bulb for the first time
Willow Paule
About 9 million Indonesian households were headed by women in 2010. These households typically consist of up to six dependents and are poor, with many living below the poverty line. Female heads are between 20 to 60 years of age, and almost 40 per cent have never gone to school. These women are typically widows or have been abandoned by their husbands. With growing numbers of Indonesian men going abroad to work, some provinces have seen sharp increases in women headed households as migrant worker husbands start new families elsewhere and never return.
These Indonesian women, who are the sole providers for their families, face a range of discriminatory practices. To start with, female-headed households are not legally recognised under the 1974 Marriage Law, which states that men are heads of family. This makes it difficult for female heads to access government provisions for the poor, such as cash transfer schemes (Bantuan Langsung Tunai) or community health insurance (Jamkesmas). At the same time, expensive court fees stop women from accessing their own marriage or birth certificates, thereby preventing them from obtaining legal divorces or seeking any kind of compensation. The absence of mechanisms to assist female-headed households traps these marginalised women

Read more...

Unsafe motherhood

Unsafe motherhood:

For poor women in Indonesia, giving birth can be a life-threatening experience

Andrew Rosser

rosser1.jpg

The cover of Eko Prasetyo's book, Poor People Are Forbidden to be Sick, captures well the challenge that poor people in Indonesia face in gaining access to health care
In late November last year, according to online news service Okezone, a poor woman named Yusleni arrived at Banda Aceh Women and Children’s Hospital to give birth to her second child. She was admitted to the emergency room and given an infusion. While in the emergency room, her husband completed the necessary paperwork to register her and arrange for the birth to be covered by Jamkesmas, a national health insurance scheme for poor people that pays hospitals a much lower rate than they are able to charge other patients. About an hour later, a hospital medical officer advised them that there were no beds available and that they would have to look for another maternity hospital. With Yusleni in advanced labour, she and her sister hailed a becak and, in the middle of the night, started looking for a local midwife to deliver the baby. Barely 300 metres down the road they were forced to turn back after her sister noticed that the baby’s head was already visible. This time the hospital found her a bed in the emergency room, and took care of the remainder of the delivery. Yusleni survived the

Read more...

Dealing with social exclusion

Dealing with social exclusion:

Illegal squatters in Jakarta struggle for recognition of their homes and livelihoods



Lukas Ley

ley1.jpg

The inhabitants of Bongkaran provide a cheap labour force
Lukas Ley
Ariel is a squatter. When we met in Pademangan Timur, a sub-district of North Jakarta, I asked her if this was where she lived. ‘Yes,’ she replied with a nervous laugh, ‘but I’m actually here illegally. I’m officially registered in the legal area, but my house is over there.’ She pointed in the direction of an area commonly called Bongkaran. Today this poor neighbourhood is home to approximately 2000 people, families of both long-time city dwellers and recent immigrants.
Declaring that they live in the sub-district where they are registered is a common way for illegal squatters to circumvent government regulations. Despite what many people think, most squatters are not illegal immigrants, but people who have been living in Jakarta for decades or even generations. Upheavals in Jakarta's poor neighbourhoods mean that their inhabitants often have to move on, looking for somewhere to live where they can still get to their places of employment. In fact, the name Bongkaran derives from the Indonesian word bongkar, which means take apart or uproot. The name alludes to the place's origins, but it also foreshadows its future destruction.

Localised self-government

Bongkaran, which covers an area of approximately 4 hectares, emerged on land which is subject to a total ban on construction of any kind. Twelve years

Read more...

Cuba receives first US shipment in 50 years

Cuba receives first US shipment in 50 years: Fifty-year US trade embargo on Caribbean island over ideological differences ends with delivery of humanitarian aid.

LinkedIn Today gets Facebook-esque commenting, liking and trending features

LinkedIn Today gets Facebook-esque commenting, liking and trending features: 238539492 46d555ce38 z1 520x245 LinkedIn Today gets Facebook esque commenting, liking and trending features
Now that LinkedIn has gotten rid of all of the Twitter spam from its service, the company is now focusing on bubbling up great content via its “Today” product.
Today, the company announced some new social features for Today, including commenting, liking and trending. The hope is that your network of colleagues will be submitting interesting news, and you’ll trust their recommendations on what you’re going to read. Yes, sounds a bit Facebookish to me, but it’s not a network of your kinda-friends or family members, so LinkedIn gets a pass here.
Here’s a full rundown on the features, which should be expected for a product such as this:
Commenting & Liking: Sometimes the commentary about a news article can be just as insightful as the article itself. To that end, articles on LinkedIn Today will now include social gestures which will enable our 161 million member professionals to engage and create a dialogue around the news headlines that matter most to them, as well as learn what is currently trending online. This means, members will be able to see a snapshot of what’s top of mind among their professional networks.
linkedintoday1 520x397 LinkedIn Today gets Facebook esque commenting, liking and trending features
Trending in Your Network: LinkedIn Today was built on the premise of providing a relevant, customizable news experience based on key news and updates trending in your industry and the other industries you choose to follow. Starting today, we will begin rolling a new tab called “Trending in Your Network.” By simply clicking on this tab, members will have yet another filter to sort through all of the professional news articles and industry updates, based on those articles that are currently the most popular among members of their professional networks, regardless of their industry.
linkedintoday21 520x355 LinkedIn Today gets Facebook esque commenting, liking and trending features
I’ve personally gone back to using LinkedIn more since there isn’t as much noise. I like the fact that the company has dedicated a page to all of this content, as I simply need to pick and choose when I get a bunch of articles and links thrown in my face. The main LinkedIn feed needs to stay as quiet as possible, so that I can pick out important connections or events in my network.
There is definitely a possibility that you could build a stronger relationship with a connection based on the content that they share, since you’ll see their avatar popping up in comments and alongside the headlines themselves.

President Morsi of Egypt Is Undercut by State-Run Media

President Morsi of Egypt Is Undercut by State-Run Media: State broadcasters and newspapers have quickly allied with the Egypt’s generals over President Mohamed Morsi, making it clear who still holds the real power over Egypt’s bureaucracy.

The Saturday Profile: In Mexico, Father Solalinde Defends Migrant Rights

The Saturday Profile: In Mexico, Father Solalinde Defends Migrant Rights: The Rev. Alejandro Solalinde has raised Mexicans’ awareness of the plight of Central and South American migrants who face extortion, rape, kidnapping and murder en route to the United States.

Journeys: As Mongolia Changes, the Past Is Still Present

Journeys: As Mongolia Changes, the Past Is Still Present: A family meets at a tent camp in the Mongolian mountains, and catches glimpses of an ancient people.

Syrian Pilot’s Defection Signals Trouble for Government

Syrian Pilot’s Defection Signals Trouble for Government: While the ruling party is Alawite, much of Syria’s administration and its military ability depend on Sunni bureaucrats, soldiers and officers, who are increasingly disaffected.

Blog post about sexual assault in D.C. unleashes torrent of women’s stories

Blog post about sexual assault in D.C. unleashes torrent of women’s stories:
Liz Gorman did what the others didn’t.
After she was sexually assaulted on a D.C. street in the middle of the day, she not only called police, she also wrote a blog post about the way she was violated. The response was incredible.
Read full article >>


Editorial Board: The breaking point in Syria

Editorial Board: The breaking point in Syria:
SYRIA HAS SLIPPED deeper into the abyss. Perhaps as many as 220 people have been killed in a farming town, Tremseh, northwest of the city of Hama, by shelling and shooting from Syrian forces. Reports suggest that the town was first attacked from the air and then stormed by militiamen who slaughtered civilians. As bodies were grimly laid out in mass graves on Friday, the opposition called it a massacre, as did Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. The assault appears to fit a pattern of ethnic cleansing in which government forces and militias from Alawite villages are laying siege to largely Sunni towns.
Read full article >>



Judges skeptical of Texas’s arguments on voter ID law

Judges skeptical of Texas’s arguments on voter ID law:
On Friday morning, Judge Robert L. Wilkins looked out across the packed courtroom at the lawyer for Texas and suggested that the state’s voter ID law would force some people to travel more than 100 miles to get the documents required for a photo identification.
Read full article >>


2012 campaign enters a new phase, as Obama and Romney rachet up their attacks on each other

2012 campaign enters a new phase, as Obama and Romney rachet up their attacks on each other:
President Obama’s campaign has spent many months trying to portray Mitt Romney as an unprincipled flip-flopper, a panderer to right-wing extremists and a greedy business executive. Then this week the ante was upped when one Obama aide suggested that Romney may be something worse: a potential felon.
Read full article >>



Clinton meets with new Egyptian president in Cairo amid persisting political uncertainty

Clinton meets with new Egyptian president in Cairo amid persisting political uncertainty:
CAIRO — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met for the first time Saturday with Egypt’s Islamist President Mohamed Morsi, whose country remains politically unsettled more than a year and a half after the chaotic fall of Hosni Mubarak.
Read full article >>



How D.C. became a District of Corruption

How D.C. became a District of Corruption:
Vincent C. Gray’s election as mayor in 2010 was the result in no small measure of his success in tapping a deep well of resentment in the black community over Adrian M. Fenty’s perceived aloofness. Gray was helped along in this effort by Marion Barry.
Read full article >>



Turkey, Poland to Get IMF Seats

Turkey, Poland to Get IMF Seats: Turkey and Poland will for the first time hold seats on the International Monetary Fund's executive board under a political agreement reached in recent weeks.

Afghan Officials Targeted in Attacks

Afghan Officials Targeted in Attacks: Several senior Afghan officials were killed in a wave of assassinations around Afghanistan, including a prominent ethnic Uzbek politician, a top police chief and a senior army commander.

Teenager Films Afghan Child Labor

Teenager Films Afghan Child Labor: A video shot by an 18-year-old Afghan in the claustrophobic passages of a coal mine casts new light on one of Afghanistan's most disturbing challenges.

In Egypt's Sinai desert, Islamic militants gaining new foothold - The Washington Post

In Egypt's Sinai desert, Islamic militants gaining new foothold - The Washington Post

Military Fails to Feed Itself

Military Fails to Feed Itself:
North Korea is trying to combat malnutrition among its soldiers by encouraging them to raise livestock and grow enough food for themselves but the effort has met with little success.

Individual units of the Korean People’s Army have been tasked with raising animals and growing their own crops since February 2011, when current North Korean leader Kim Jong Un—then vice chairman of the Central Military Commission— initiated a campaign to have them provide their own food.

The movement called for soldiers in the 1.2 million-strong army to wipe out malnutrition by breeding their own goats and rabbits.

But the program faced a stumbling block due to a lack of feed for the animals, a representative of a human rights organization that works in North Hamgyong province told RFA, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The source, who keeps in regular contact with servicemen in the North Korea-China border area, said they told him that most military units have failed to raise enough animals to eat.

“They are ordered to raise animals from rabbits to goats and dogs but they say that they can’t.  There’s nothing to feed the animals,” he said.

Goats and rabbits
After the units received the orders from the military’s General Political Bureau last year, each unit organized a side job team for raising animals and aimed to raise 100 goats, he said.

Units built special quarters for the job, and groups of men were given time off of work to travel to obtain goats and rabbits for the units to start breeding, he said.

But since they didn’t have any grass to graze on or other animal feed, the goats were undernourished, he said. 

As for the rabbits, the soldiers’ officers ate them without leaving enough to breed, the source said.

One unit in South Hamgyong province, the communications battalion of Training Center 108 located near the mountains, lacked suitable land for the goats to graze, so they let the animals run loose in nearby cornfields.

The roaming goats caused a furor among nearby residents, prompting them to blame Kim Jong Un for the campaign, saying he showed little concern for how the animals affected nearby civilians, the source said.

Looting

Another source said soldiers had trouble finding enough seeds and fertilizer to grow crops and vegetables.

Seung-chul Baek, a North Korean defector familiar with the situations of the Army Corps 9 in North Hamgyong province, said the unit had failed to grow adequate food.

“This year, they received Kim Jong Un’s order to farm. So each unit organized a team to find new land and focused on farming. But due to lack of seeds, fertilizers and other farming materials, they had no success in farming either.”

He said another group of soldiers in Kangwon province in the southern part of the country which was unable to grow enough of their own food had turned to looting nearby residents.

“Since raising animals became a life and death struggle for these military servicemen ... residents of Kangwon Province have given up on their own animals [for them],” he said.

Unable to endure the hunger, some of the servicemen turned to thievery, he said.

“In Kangwon province, the men suddenly turned into robbers and attacked people passing by and stole animals.”

Food shortages

In 2010, several international charities raised money to send giant rabbits to North Korea to boost the food supply. The aim was that North Koreans would use them to breed a cheap source of protein, but what happened to the rabbits after they reached the country was unknown.

North Korea has been reeling from persistent food shortages since a famine in the mid-1990s that resulted in several million deaths, and relies on foreign aid to feed its people.

The lack of food security in the nation has led to the proliferation of an underground market economy, which authorities have largely tolerated because of the failures of the public distribution system to sufficiently provide rations for the population.

In April, the U.S. suspended planned food shipments to North Korea in following a rocket launch Washington said breached a February deal, under which Pyongyang agreed to a partial nuclear freeze and a missile and nuclear test moratorium in return for 240,000 tons of U.S. food aid.

The aid package had been expected to target the neediest in North Korea, including malnourished young children and pregnant women.

Reported by Young Chung for RFA’s Korean service. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.

Jul 13, 2012

Radical Islamists Wage Muslim Civil War in Africa - Wall Street Journal

Radical Islamists Wage Muslim Civil War in Africa - Wall Street Journal:

Wall Street Journal


Radical Islamists Wage Muslim Civil War in Africa
Wall Street Journal
In The Wall Street Journal, Melik Kaylan writes that extremist imams and jihadists infiltrate peaceful Muslim lands, uprooting religious customs that have existed for centuries.

US 'Outraged' By Continued Destruction Of Muslim Shrines In Timbuktu - RTT News

US 'Outraged' By Continued Destruction Of Muslim Shrines In Timbuktu - RTT News:

AFP


US 'Outraged' By Continued Destruction Of Muslim Shrines In Timbuktu
RTT News
The United States has strongly condemned destruction of Muslim shrines and other religious and historic sites in the ancient Mali city of Timbuktu by Islamist militants, including Ansar al-Dine.
US Condemns Destruction of Ancient Muslim Shrines in MaliVoice of America (blog)
Islamic extremists destroy Muslim tombs in MaliOrlando Sentinel (blog)
Destruction of Muslim Shrines in TimbuktuImperial Valley News
News24 -NPR -AFP
all 454 news articles »

Christian and Muslim alliance commits to help solving tensions in Nigeria - PR Web (press release)

Christian and Muslim alliance commits to help solving tensions in Nigeria - PR Web (press release):

PR Web (press release)


Christian and Muslim alliance commits to help solving tensions in Nigeria
PR Web (press release)
The World Council of Churches (WCC) and the Royal Aal Al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought (RABIIT) on 12 July issued a report on their joint commitment to help in resolving the tensions in Nigeria. The report reflects a new Christian-Muslim model of ...
Jos and its Intractable ConflictNigeria Intel
Interfaith report: Poverty and injustice drive Nigeria's sectarian violenceReuters Blogs (blog)
Nigeria Violence Kills Over 100 ChristiansWorthy News
The Nation Newspaper -Christian Science Monitor
all 777 news articles »

Video: CAIR Urges U.S. Muslims to Share Ramadan with Neighbors - Sacramento Bee

Video: CAIR Urges U.S. Muslims to Share Ramadan with Neighbors - Sacramento Bee:

Onislam.net


Persecution of the Ahmadi Muslims continues in Pakistan - Examiner.com

Persecution of the Ahmadi Muslims continues in Pakistan - Examiner.com:

Examiner.com


Persecution of the Ahmadi Muslims continues in Pakistan
Examiner.com
Can a country progress when its government advocates the oppression of minorities? Here in the U.S. we never question our rights. In fact, we take everything fo.

and more »

Saudi Arabia and the Brotherhood: What the New York Times Missed - The Nation. (blog)

Saudi Arabia and the Brotherhood: What the New York Times Missed - The Nation. (blog):

The Nation. (blog)


Saudi Arabia and the Brotherhood: What the New York Times Missed
The Nation. (blog)
The kleptocratic Saudi Arabian kingdom has long backed the Muslim Brotherhood.
New Republic: What's Going On In Egypt?NPR
Egypt's Mursi visits Saudi Arabia to mend tiesChicago Tribune
Who Paid for Egypt's Gold Braid?Family Research Council (blog)
MuslimVillage.com
all 552 news articles »

More people are risking lives in the Caribbean to reach safety

More people are risking lives in the Caribbean to reach safety: UNHCR is very concerned by the loss of life we are seeing in maritime incidents in the Caribbean among people trying to escape difficult conditions in Haiti.
On Tuesday July 10, a woman drowned when a...

Daily Number: 80% - Most Mexicans Back Military Campaign against Drug Cartels

Daily Number: 80% - Most Mexicans Back Military Campaign against Drug Cartels: A majority of Mexicans continue to support the use of the country’s army to fight drug traffickers.

Pervasive Gloom About the World Economy

Pervasive Gloom About the World Economy:

Overview

The economic mood is exceedingly glum all around the world. A median of just 27 percent think their national economy is doing well, according to a survey in 21 countries by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project. Only in China (83%), Germany (73%), Brazil (65%) and Turkey (57%) do most people report that current national economic conditions are good.
The public mood about the economy has worsened since 2008 in eight of 15 countries for which there is comparable data, while it is essentially unchanged in four others. The Chinese are the lone exception. They have been positive about their economy for the past decade.
Less than a third of Americans (31%) say the U.S. economy is doing well. That figure is up 13 percentage points from 2011. (But it is down 19 points from 2007, the year before the financial crunch began.) A median of just 16% of Europeans surveyed think their economy is performing up to par. That includes just 2% of the Greeks and 6% of the Spanish and Italians. Among Europeans, only the Germans (73%) give their economy a thumbs up. And just 7% of Japanese believe their economy is doing well.
People are, however, generally far more positive about their personal economic condition than they are about their nation’s economic situation. A median of 52 percent in the 21 nations surveyed feel satisfied with their own circumstances. Americans are twice as likely to say their family finances are in good shape as they are to say that the national economic situation is good. There are larger differences in Britain and Japan, where those who rate their personal economic situation as good exceed the number who have positive views of the national economy by more than four-to-one. Only the Chinese are significantly more likely to say the national economy is doing better than their families’ finances.
And there is some optimism that things will improve in the next 12 months, especially in Brazil (84%), China (83%) and Tunisia (75%). Nevertheless, pessimism about young peoples’ ability to do better than their parents is rampant, particularly in Europe (a median of only 9% think it will be easy) and Japan (10%). Again, the lone exception is China, where 57% say it will be easy for their children to become wealthier or to get a better job.


There is a striking contrast between the economic outlook in four of the emerging markets surveyed – Brazil, China, India and Turkey – and the European Union and the U.S. People living in these economies are generally more likely than Americans or Europeans to say that they are doing better than their parents. They are twice as likely as Americans and more than three times as likely as Europeans to think economic conditions in their countries are good. They are three times more likely than Europeans and more than twice as likely as Americans to say that they are financially better off compared with five years ago. And, while people in emerging markets also worry about the economic mobility of their children, they are four times more optimistic about the future for their kids than the Europeans and twice as optimistic as Americans.
In contrast, economic attitudes are particularly gloomy in the four nations polled in the Arab world. Only a third of those surveyed think they are better off than their parents at the same age. A median of only 30% say they are doing well financially. And a median of only 16% believe their children will have an easy time becoming economically better off than themselves.
Tough times have undermined the work ethic in a number of countries among people who are suffering economically. Those who say their personal finances are a mess are far less likely than those who are doing well to believe that most people succeed if they work hard.
The global economic crisis has eroded support for capitalism. In 11 of the 21 nations surveyed, half or fewer now agree with the statement that people are better off in a free market economy even though some people are rich and some are poor. And such backing is down in 9 of 16 nations with comparable data since 2007, before the Great Recession began. Such disenchantment is particularly acute in Italy (where support for a free market economy is down 23 percentage points), Spain (20 points) and Poland (15 points).
These are among the key findings from a new survey by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project, conducted in 21 countries among 26,210 respondents from March 17 to April 20, 2012.

SOMALIA: Tens of thousands need food aid in Somaliland

SOMALIA: Tens of thousands need food aid in Somaliland:
HARGEISA, 13 July 2012 (IRIN) - About 120,000 people in the coastal, mid- and far western regions of the self-declared republic of Somaliland require emergency food assistance after four years of failed rains, says Mohamed Mousa Awale, chairman of Somaliland's environment research and disaster preparedness agency.

SUDAN-CHAD: The strains of long-term displacement

SUDAN-CHAD: The strains of long-term displacement:
GOZ-BEIDA, 13 July 2012 (IRIN) - Djabal refugee camp in eastern Chad, where some residents have stayed for nearly a decade after fleeing violence in neighbouring Sudan, illustrates some of the family and social problems engendered by displacement and dependency.

DRC: Top officials warn against witch-hunts, hate speech

DRC: Top officials warn against witch-hunts, hate speech:
KINSHASA, 13 July 2012 (IRIN) - Officials in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) have assured leaders of the Tutsi community they are working to protect Tutsis across the country amid rising resentment sparked by a mutiny led mainly by Tutsi soldiers in the east.