Monday, December 9, 2013

Help Sahalandy Founders Return To Madagascar

The silkies' business is booming, and you can help the founders of Sahalandy return to Madagascar to help the women:

  • Organize and implement trainings on new dyeing, weaving, and quality control techniques.
  • Conduct a social impact assessment to realize and appreciate SAHALANDY's  success. 
  • Discuss the possibility of scaling the project to new communities of silk weavers.
  • Do research for Natalie's Master's thesis project showcasing SAHALANDY's success 

Also, you can get perks for contributing, including scarves and vanilla beans. I recommend you check out their Indiegogo Fundraiser and contribute if you can!

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Giving Tuesday - UNHP

For a few months this summer and fall, I worked with a nonprofit housing organization in the Bronx, University Neighborhood Housing Program (UNHP). They and their partner organizations do great work in affordable housing, financial literacy, children's services, and other needed community programs. Here are some of the UNHP buildings and programs.

As you may know, today is "Giving Tuesday," the pushback to the consumerist "Black Friday." UNHP is very deserving of your attention today, so take a look at their donation page if you are so inclined!

Monday, December 2, 2013

Coordinating EcoAgriculture Efforts in the Maasai Steppe

Manyara Ranch is a colonial-era cattle ranch located in the northern part of Tanzania near Arusha. Following independence, the Ranch was occupied by Maasai pastoralists and their cattle, sheep, and goats. Some of these pastoralists adopted agricultural practices, growing beans and other crops vital for survival. Soon the ranch was overrun with domesticated animals and small-scale farms, using massive amounts of water and plant resources. But the Maasai were not alone on Manyara Ranch - it lay along the vital wildlife corridor between Tarangire and Manyara National Parks. Herds of wildebeest and large predators roamed the Ranch, leading to the inevitable clash of human and natural worlds.
Manyara Ranch
To address this clash, Tanzania decided to grant the Ranch to the Tanzania Land Conservation Trust with the dual mandate of restoring the area to wildlife use and benefiting local communities. Soon, grasslands regenerated and wild animals returned in droves. The Trust and its partner, the African Wildlife Foundation (AWF), administer Manyara Ranch as a protected area with limited cattle production uses. The concept was to find a balance between the local communities' needs and those of the wildlife roaming the corridor.
Elephants, Zebras, and other animals now wander freely throughout parts of the Ranch
But such a balance is often easier said then done. Wildlife can impact local communities inadvertently, predators can hunt cattle rather than their usual prey, and water needs can push herders further into wildlife territory. This last point is exacerbated in the area by the spread of farms, as land converted to agriculture pushes the pastoralists further to find water and grass for their livestock, and this brings them into direct competition with wild animals.
An example of damage wrought by elephants
In order to find the balance between all of these interests, one must start with engagement. As part of my work with my new employer, EcoAgriculture Partners(*), I got to see this engagement firsthand. EcoAgriculture Partners, through the Landscapes for People, Food and Nature Initiative, partnered with AWF to bring stakeholders together from conservation organizations, research institutions, non-governmental organizations, and community groups. Through participatory methods, these stakeholders assessed the state of Manyara Ranch and the entire Maasai Steppe Heartland Landscape. Based on their priorities and needs, they selected strategies to enhance each of the landscape goals of ecological conservation, agricultural production, livelihood security, and institutional strengthening.
Finding Solutions Together
This process was not the solution itself, but rather the beginning of a long journey together. There will be steps forward and steps back, but now they have shared goals rather than competing ones. It should be an interesting journey for Manyara Ranch and the greater landscape as a whole.
Up close and personal with one of Manyara Ranch's residents


(*) For more on my new job with EcoAgriculture Partners, see this post

New Job: EcoAgriculture Partners

Recently I started a new international development job in Washington, DC. I am working for EcoAgriculture Partners, a non-profit organization working towards the shared goals of environmental conservation, agricultural production, and livelihood security. I am supporting the Landscapes for People, Food and Nature Initiative (LPFN) and other programs. This includes research and program support mostly in sub-Saharan Africa but expanding throughout the world. Basically our work is a holistic approach of participatory community development that supports agriculture, environment, livelihoods... all the things I love! I may be blogging a bit about the work here, but you can read more on the LPFN blog and on the EcoAgriculture Twitter.

You can learn more at the links above (and some more details about my work and and my new colleagues here).

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

SRI in Tanzania

I just landed in Arusha, Tanzania for work (more on this soon). While my work is not rice-related at all, I found myself reading up on SRI (System of Rice Intensification) projects in Tanzania out of curiosity. I didn't know what to expect, but the organic rice growing method is indeed the subject of several projects in Tanzania.

Here is a recent article on SRI successes in Tanzania (hat tip to SRIRice).
When Habiba Msoga from Kiroka village, in Tanzania’s Morogoro Region, first began applying a method of rice cultivation that was different from what her fellow farmers traditionally used, they laughed at her.But now three years later, as she falls asleep each night in her newly built brick home that will soon have electricity, she could not be happier.“When I started some people were laughing at me because they thought it was impossible to grow rice without flooding the field. But I have proved them wrong. My harvests now are just too much,” the 37-year-old mother of three told IPS.
The article focuses on the changing climate patterns necessitating a shift to conservation agriculture (and water-management techniques like SRI). It also touches upon the low uptake of SRI by the farmers in Ms. Msoga's village:
Only Msoga and 267 others – a fraction of the village’s almost 3,000 farmers – joined the project as not everyone was keen to embrace the System of Rice Intensification or SRI. 
The method is different enough that farmers are usually skeptical everywhere. In Tanzania, this study discuses farmer adoption specifically, deciding that there is great potential in the practice but further extension efforts (and a local-level policy framework on shared water use/management) are needed. The study also pointed to India as the source of the SRI knowledge, which seems to be the common SRI dissemination country these days (despite its origin in Madagascar).

One final SRI link: Hybridizing Technology: The Case of Rice Farming in Nepal
This article sums up my feelings on SRI, basically that farmers are smart and will adopt or adapt aspects of SRI as they see fit. It should never be promoted as a defined prescription, but rather as a set of best practices to be modified by the farmer as needed. In Nepal:
Farmers tried to adapt SRI to their agro-ecological and socio-economic system, choosing some of the practices best suited to them and their particular fields. This taught us, as an extension agency, to rethink our technology dissemination process for different type farmers, and to begin providing them with a set of options that are flexible enough to allow farmers to choose appropriate for their particular situation.



Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Deforestation Picks Up

I saw this article (via Ryan Marsh) and just had to share:
[NASA] picked up strong deforestation signals in the three tropical countries between July 1 and September 30, 2013: Bolivia (167 percent increase in deforestation relative to the year-earlier period), Madagascar (126 percent), and Ecuador (38 percent). Outside the tropics, Pakistan, China, the United States, and Argentina appeared to experience an increase in forest and woodland disturbance.
For Madagascar, the scientists particularly noticed "New areas of disturbance in the northeast (Ampijoroana)"

Interesting, if troubling, science!

Speaking of deforestation, I just saw this cool graphic from CIFOR.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Madagascar Election Day is Here!

I just wanted to share my excitement that election day is finally here for Madagascar! As I write this, the voting may already be wrapping up (though reports of long lines at the polling stations indicate a possible extension). Most news outlets are hopeful (like BBC and Reuters), while others are hopeless. Personally, I am happy to see people get the chance to participate once again in their own country's decisions. Will it be perfect? Probably not, but then few elections are (including my own country's). And there will probably be a run-off. And even after the election, the Malagasy people have a lot of work to do to reclaim their country and its democracy.

Despite my skepticism over the years, I am hopeful that this election will at least be a step forward for the country and its people.  Any positive step would be welcome, and afterwards we can begin to focus once again on the many positive aspects of Madagascar.

So, to everyone participating today, and Madagascar lovers everywhere:
Good Luck, Bonne Chance, Mirary Soa!

Friday, October 4, 2013

Madagascar Presidential Candidate Receives 350 SUVs?

Former Prime Minister and current General Camille Vital is running for President of Madagascar, and with a recent "campaign" gift, he will be travelling in style. Apparently 350 SUVs arrived this week in the port city of Tamatave, linked to Vital and destined for security forces throughout the island. I say apparently because I have not seen too many sources on this story - a Malagasy friend tipped me off to it, and there is a news report here from the Malagasy paper La Nation (fyi: there is a rather gruesome image on the newspaper site) - but not too many other sources exist. Most other news outlets seem preoccupied with the violent news coming out of parts of Madagascar, such as Nosy Be. I don't know how accurate these reports on General Vital are, but if you connect violent outbreaks and poverty with the on-going political crisis in Madagascar then you must pay attention to the political process purporting to pull the country out of its international isolation.

Then-Colonel Camille Vital became Prime Minister in 2009 under Andry Rajoelina, a move many saw at the time as an intimidation measure. It also strengthened Rajoelina's ties to the military, particularly the officer class which supported him in over-throwing former President Ravalomanana. Vital spoke directly and acted tough, particularly when addressing the international community and domestic opposition. At one point, the internationally-mediated road map to end the political crisis demanded a "consensus" prime minister, so Vital stepped down... for a few days, before returning under the "Consensus" Prime Minister guise. He remained in this position until 2011, when President Rajoelina bowed to international pressure and sacked Vital in favor of Omer Berziky. But Vital was also promoted to Brigadier General (*) and eventually landed in the cushy job of "Permanent Representative to the United Nations Office at Geneva."

Now General Vital is running for President, and with a huge field of candidates lacking a clear favorite (leading candidates Rajoelina, Lalao Ravalomanana, and Didier Ratsiraka were finally barred from participation), his name recognition might be a huge advantage. But more important may be his connections to the security forces. When I saw Madagascar named as a top-5 potential-coup country, I noted the importance of the military and its potential search for a new patron. They may have found that patron in General Vital - supposedly these 200 Hyundai Santa Fes and 150 Nissan pick-up trucks are being distributed to the Department of Justice, the Law Enforcement, and District Leaders. The donors are anonymous, attributed to the group "Hiaraka Isika" who seem to be funding Vital's campaign, so I am wary of both the source of the funds (influencing a potential President-to-be) and the recipients (beholden to a new benefactor).


It is important for Madagascar to achieve its goal of a free and fair election; the rest of us need to pay more attention to the campaigns to support their goal.


(*) I think before he left office?

Here is another old post on the Malagasy security forces for background reading!

Monday, September 16, 2013

Experience a BlattClass

I just saw this tweet from about one of my former professors:
Of course, I had to read the article on The Monkey Cage, "How to Manage Your Grad School Adviser." Mostly it highlights the post from (my former master's professor) Blattman about how students should work with him. All well and good, and even that line at the end about who is in the photo is pretty spot-on. So why bother to write about this? Basically, it occurred to me that some Blatt-o-philes out there may be curious about what a class with @cblatts is really like. I only have the experience of a SIPA master's level class, but it looked exactly like this:

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Another Year of New Masters Students

It's that time of the year again, the time when starry-eyed idealists and bitter cynics come together to begin a graduate program in international development. So I thought I'd re-share my "advice" (tongue firmly in cheek) for new MDP and other development grad students. Most of it still applies, and I stand by it. As for advice as to whether or not you should attend grad school in the first place, well... my opinions on this are still being formed! (hint: they might depend on where I end up in a few years).

Grad school is a unique experience, regardless of where you end up, so enjoy it. But, for those of you in your second year, start thinking about (and working towards) finding that job you wanted when you first applied to grad school. Or as I was told last year, "Wake up!"

Oh, and a quick refresher course on political / development economists, to get you back in the scholarly mood.

Monday, August 5, 2013

Links to MDP Class of 2014 Summer Experiences

Last summer I was bemoaning the lack of MDP summer blogs, citing the posts from previous years as major drivers in my interest in the program. So you think I would've linked to this year's cohort and their adventures around the world. I've been negligent, but this post from one of the student's was too good not to share:
Shortly thereafter I excuse myself to the toilet. Within a half hour of that trip, I’m vomiting. I don’t like vomiting, and don’t do it often. I’m troubled and feeling bad for myself. Meanwhile, a thousand people who had roofs to sit under three days ago must find shelter elsewhere tonight.
Full post here - it's a great, albeit gut-wrenching-at-times, read. Check out the whole blog while you're at it.

Some other good reads to check out (all updated within last few weeks), if you are interested in:

Check them all out. Oh, and perhaps my favorite because of all the awesome photos, this Tumblr in Sierra Leone.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Amazing Madagascar Photos

Keeping with the recent theme of awesome Madagascar RPCV-related content, Peace Corps superstar Katie Browne (whose blog you may have read before) is also an amazing photographer. I highly recommend clicking through to her website, Sights Unseen Photography, to see some stunning Malagasy landscapes and portraits and many other types of photographs! She really captures some amazing moments. I don't want to show too much here, but just to whet your appetite...


Friday, July 19, 2013

Malagasy Silkies: The Movie

Many of you have seen me write about the Sahalandy silk project before - as recently as last week, in fact. Their documentary premiered at the Santa Fe International Folk Art Festival last week  Now, with the magical power of the internet, you can see the excellent story of this Malagasy women's cooperative. It is short (25 minutes) but packed with excellent footage and interviews. If you are interested in this operation, handicraft enterprises, or Madagascar in general, this is a must-see. While I didn't live in a silk-producing community, the rice and forest scenes are very similar to my experiences. And the people are just as awesome as all the other Malagasy I have met. Finally, for those of you lucky enough to receive a silk scarf souvenir from me, it definitely came from these ladies. Check out the film, and here is their etsy site one more time in case you are interested in a purchase.


The Silkies of Madagascar - 25 mins. from David Evans on Vimeo.

Friday, July 12, 2013

Friday Music Video: Political Skirmish

My most-regular Malagasy reader suggested the below video, a Malagasy song called "Political Skirmish" by the artist Bodo. It's in English, and still (unfortunately) applies for the country. Let's hope the crisis gets solved soon, somehow! Here is the reader's description:
I just wanna share this old song (1992) of probably the most famous female Malagasy singer, Bodo. I still find this song relevant for the current Madagascar's political circus.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Bringing Peace Corps Counterparts to the USA

You may recall that the Peace Corps has three goals: Helping the people of interested countries in meeting their need for trained men and women; helping promote a better understanding of Americans on the part of the peoples served; and helping promote a better understanding of other peoples on the part of Americans. The cultural exchange embodied in the last two is an on-going challenge for Peace Corps Volunteers (PCVs), but also often represents the best stories and experiences of service. Yet it has always been on the PCV to "bring" the USA to the host country, and the host country back to the USA. What about working the other way, with host-country nationals bringing their culture to the USA and the USA back to their own countries? This idea has been around for some time now, particularly when discussing ways to improve the Peace Corps to better meet its goals. I cannot recall for sure, but this might have even been in the original Kennedy/Shriver vision for the Peace Corps' future.

The idea is to bring a PCV's counterpart to the USA at some point during service. Cost alone makes this nearly impossible. Another hurdle is finding these counterparts. In Madagascar, volunteers usually were assigned counterparts to work with, but only time would tell if they were effective co-workers. Or if they were operating within the law; in my first village, there were numerous rumors that my assigned counterpart, head of the community forest protection alliance and one of the richest men in town, profited from illegal logging of the forest corridor. Only rumors, but they highlight the difficulties in selecting counterparts. While some assigned counterparts turn out to be excellent connections, many others do not, so PCVs find their own [Hence my favorite Peace Corps recruiting slogan: Peace Corps, the toughest job you'll ever look for]. Other challenges to bringing counterparts to the USA include culture shock and village rivalries, to name but a few. In short, such an exchange is very difficult and not within the Peace Corps' abilities.

Yet sometimes PCVs themselves find ways to bring their counterparts to the USA. I have been luck enough to see a current PCV and her Malagasy counterpart arrive in the USA twice now, and it is quite an experience to behold. Both times it was a PCV and her silk-weaving counterpart from Sahalandy, in the USA to attend the Santa Fe International Folk Art Market. On the most recent occasion, earlier this week, I played New York City tour guide for the PCV and her counterpart. It is not really my story to tell; the tale of the big city from the counterpart's eyes or the experience from the PCV's perspective would be far more interesting. Suffice it to say that I was impressed by the Malagasy woman's cultural awareness and relaxed attitude to the hustle-and-bustle of NYC. The insights she made were interesting, such as pointing out how fat Americans are (every Madagascar PCV can relate to hearing this one!). She was also impressed with the cleanliness of New York City, an attitude I have not heard too often but definitely understand when compared to Antananarivo. We talked a bit about her exhaustion with the Malagasy political crisis and her concern over the locust infestation in Madagascar, but mostly we just toured the city and I listened to her observations. Much like the other visit I witnessed in DC in 2011, the Malagasy woman mostly stressed how much she wanted her children to see the sights. It was a great example of what made me join the Peace Corps in the first place: the belief that people are very similar throughout the world, with the same basic dreams and desires, in this case the hope of offering a child new opportunities and a bright future.

If you're interested in Sahalandy, and their Malagasy representative Lalao, they are premiering their documentary and will be selling throughout the weekend at the Folk Art Festival (or always online via Etsy). There is another Malagasy artist in attendance this year in Santa Fe, too!


**Final thought: Lalao really wanted to see churches during her visit. She did not mention this until the end of our tour, and for some reason it never occurred to me yet makes perfect sense - Malagasy people tend to be very religious (Catholic or Protestant), yet most people who join the Peace Corps tend to be much less religious. So some Malagasy believe that, as PCVs are representatives of the United States, Americans must not be religious. Maybe someday more devout Christians will join the Peace Corps to present a more balanced view of Americans (and, as a side note, more political conservatives); in the meantime, we stopped by St. Patrick's and, despite the scaffolding around the exterior, Lalao loved the church and was very happy to view the interior. A reminder to future PCVs hosting counterparts in the USA: visit a church or two!

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Madagascar's Independence Day 2013

Happy Independence Day to Madagascar! Tratry ny Vingt-Six!

I should write an update on my thoughts about the never-ending political stalemate / crisis / roadmap / elections in Madagascar, and I will soon. But for now, enjoy the party all you Malagasy and lovers of the red island. May you have many wonderful years ahead! Mazatoa e!

In celebration, here is the greatest Malagasy dance, Afindrafindrao, as performed by current (and continuing?) President Rajoelina and friends:


Although I prefer the newer version by Oladad:

Sunday, June 23, 2013

It's Not the Years, Honey, It's the Mileage

Every year, I try to tell myself this quote still applies to me... (bonus 24 additional great Indy lines!)

Friday, June 21, 2013

Friday Music Videos: Amadou & Mariam, Femi Kuti

This weekend I have the chance to see some excellent African music artists in New York City, for free!

Tonight is Amadou and Mariam - here is the video I first saw as a learning tool in French class, Sénégal Fast Food (I love the narrative):

And Oh Amadou:


And Sunday is Femi Kuti!
Here is Truth Don Die:

And The World is Changing:

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Replacing Google Reader

With the impending demise of Google Reader, I have been shopping around for a new RSS aggregator. [If you're unfamiliar with RSS feeds, here is a post that got me reading development blogs AND using an aggregator].

I think I found my solution, at least for now: Feedly. It is pretty simple, yet syncs across platforms, can download stories for offline reading, and looks nice (especially on a tablet in magazine view). I recommend it as an easy-to-use solution. Now if I can just find a good replacement for TweetDeck (if I really need to?)

Here is what the web version of Feedly looks like on Chrome:

If you have a tablet, Feedly is even better in the Magazine display, like this:

Friday, May 31, 2013

Friday Music Video: Lose Yourself to Dance

Here is a more feel-good Friday afternoon music video to start your weekend. If for some reason you have not heard the new Daft Punk album (Random Access Memories), this song might encourage you to stop everything and go buy it. Critical summer party music. Now on to the dance lessons:

Friday Videos - Poverty Action Advertisements?

This past week, with family visiting for graduation, I was riding in NYC taxicabs quite a bit. During these travels, I saw an interesting series of ads played on the tv screens in the back seat: ads for Innovations for Poverty Action. I was a bit surprised to see these ads, because while fundraising campaigns for non-profits are common throughout the city, IPA has been a bit quieter than most. Also, I thought it might be tougher for them to raise funds, as they do not implement many programs but instead focus on evaluating existing programs to see what works. They, along with JPAL, are the primary performers of impact evaluations for international (and domestic) development projects as promoted by the must-read development book Poor Economics (which I eventually read last summer). Anyways, the ads certainly stand out from others, though I have not decided if I like them or not. But I am curious to learn what the intended audience (aka potential donors) think. So take a look!




Those pamphleteers have to be IPA employees, right?

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Political Economy of Development Cheat Sheet

I had my last grad school exam today. It was for Chris Blattman's "Political Economy of Development: Africa and the World" class. We were allowed a single study sheet for the exam. Mine featured some highlights of the authors we read throughout the class - I thought it would be fun to share it with you all, with a few slight adjustments (inspired by this and this).

Nicolas van de Walle


Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson


Jeffrey Sachs



William Easterly
 



Esther Duflo


Abhijit Banerjee


Jeffrey Herbst


Dambisa Moyo


Dani Rodrik


Chris Blattman

Feel free to add your own in the comments, or create some more!

Monday, May 13, 2013

A Health Warning for Value Chain Analysis Research

While working on my Micro-enterprise Development final, I reread a document that has one of the funniest introductions I can recall. The document, A Handbook for Value Chain Research by Kaplinsky and Morris, begins with the following warning:


In case you have trouble seeing the image, or want an abridged version, here are some of the best lines:

Lest anyone feel overwhelmed by the depth of detail in this Handbook, especially with respect to the sections on methodology, we would like to emphasise at the outset: this Handbook is not meant to be used or read as a comprehensive step by step process that has to be followed in order to undertake a value chain analysis. We know of no value chain analysis that has comprehensively covered all the aspects dealt with in the following pages, and certainly not in the methodologically sequential Handbook set out below. Indeed to try and do so in this form would be methodologically overwhelming, and would certainly bore any reader of such an analysis to tears.


It is not an attempt to restrict researchers within a methodological strait-jacket, but rather to free them to use whatever tools are deemed suitable from the variety presented below.


...as an array of possible technical tools, some of which may be usefully adopted and methodologically applied either partially or fully depending on circumstances; or whole parts can be skipped and not read at all.

...it is not even our intention that everyone should read the Handbook in the way one would go through a (good) novel – sequentially, and from cover to cover. We therefore urge readers to use their common sense and treat it as one does an edited book, or researchers to read it in the same way one reads a mechanics manual for finding out about one’s car. Treat the contents page as an à la carte menu, read the bits that are interesting, take what is relevant for whatever research task is at hand, and skim what is not relevant.
While the rest of the text loses the sense of humor, it is a pretty useful document. Get the pdf here.

Friday, May 10, 2013

Friday Video - David Foster Wallace

Graduation season is upon us, which means it is time to revisit David Foster Wallace's 2005 Kenyon commencement speech. You can read it here, it's pretty awesome. But there is also a new video featuring an excerpt of the audio:



Basically, it is a reminder to be aware. I think this is a particularly good concept for those of us graduating from programs focused on international development: be aware, recognize the complexity of every situation, and do your best to avoid just going-through-the-motions. And remind yourself: this is water...

(Granted, that is just a small part of the meaning in This is Water, so listen or read and then draw your own conclusions).

You can read it here in book format, as well: This Is Water: Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life

Friday, April 26, 2013

How Chris Blattman Attempted to Destroy an Innocent Mother-Son Bond

(Editor's note: sarcastic title. Mostly.)

When I was a child, my mother would regularly read me The Runaway Bunny by Margaret Wise Brown. Amazon describes the book as follows: "A little bunny keeps running away from his mother in an imaginative and imaginary game of verbal hide-and-seek; children will be profoundly comforted by this lovingly steadfast mother who finds her child every time." (Maybe this is where my sometimes-outrageous imagination hails from?) As the little bunny imagines new and exciting ways to escape the boring life at home, the mother bunny stays a step ahead of him, telling her child, "...for you are my little bunny."

My mother has reminded me of this story throughout my life. When I went to Spain in high school, she left me a birthday card that included the reminder "For you are my little bunny." Similarly, care packages arrived in Madagascar enscribed with the same line. But aside from this specific mother-son bond, I have not given the book much thought in years - very few of my friends even remember it (unlike Margaret Wise Brown's more popular Goodnight Moon).

So, imagine my surprise when The Runaway Bunny came up during a lecture in my Political Economy of Development class. Professor Blattman used the story in a state-building lecture (details here). Here is his connection between the children's book and the lecture material:
States for most of history have been unrelenting, coercive, and all-consuming. If you think of states as merely benign or civilizing, you will fail to understand the shape of society. You can try to run away, but you will come home. Here’s a carrot for your trouble.
I guess I should not be too surprised; earlier in the semester, Professor Blattman used Babar to demonstrate European colonial rule in Africa. On a completely unrelated note, he has small children...

Was The Runaway Bunny statist propaganda, meant to discourage the anrachist element in young children? It is an interesting point (though I doubt that anarchist-purging worked for me...). Others have argued it is an allegory about God/Christianity. That might be, but to me it will always just be the story of an adventure-seeking child who knows he can, contrary to Thomas Wolfe, go home again.

I guess that just goes to show, I am my mom's little bunny. I think it is time for a carrot!

Thursday, April 25, 2013

March Kenya Visit

Oh, how the time slips away from you in Grad School. I wanted to post about my week-long trip to Kenya weeks ago, since it happened in March, but a little thing called "school work" kept getting in the way. Also, it took a while to get the video at the end together...

I was visiting the projects of One Acre Fund, a very cool agricultural development NGO working mostly in East Africa. If you are interested in ag development (and been living under a rock for the past few years), you should check them out! I will not spend much time on the organization nor their model here; rather, I just wanted to offer a few random observations from an excellent trip to Nairobi and southwestern Kenya. So, here we go:
  • I was in-country during the time between the announcement of a Presidential victor (Kenyatta) and the confirmation of his victory by the Supreme Court. I heard many different opinions on the legitimacy of the elections, but I also heard a general agreement that violence would not be repeated and the entire country would accept the Supreme Court's decision. Judging from international media after I left (and after Kenyatta's confirmation), they were right. It is nice to see that political discourse did not lead to violence as the international community had feared/predicted. In other words, great work Kenya in proving so many "experts" wrong!
  • There are a lot of newspapers - everyone in the towns and cities were reading multiple papers to stay up-to-date on the political results. I have no idea how independent or distinct they are, but it was an interesting aspect to note. Somewhat related: this African newspaper search engine looks pretty cool.
  • I went at the start of the rainy season, which lives up to its name. But it meant lush greens and dark red soils.
The rains in Kisii, Kenya
  • Tourism was down while I was there, but everyone I met was warm and quite friendly. And as I said above, no political violence despite international concerns. As a few people in Nairobi kept saying: "Kenya is open for business!" So get back there, tourists!
  • The food there is good - ugali (cornmeal) by itself is a bit bland, but it is very filling and you can dip it in anything you like!
Mmm... ugali and fish!
  • The answer to my favorite evening meal in Madagascar (THB and brouchettes) in Kenya is Tusker and grilled goat meat. So good.
Ugali and nyama choma
  • The nature reserves in Nairobi are pretty cool, and you can see the tops of the skyscrapers from inside the park! In particular, the Giraffe Center is pretty great.
2 tall guys, just getting to know each other
  • And a really cool operation is elephant orphanage at Nairobi's David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, which takes in baby elephants orphaned by ivory poachers.
Football, the world's sport
  • And here is a video I took at the Trust, with some of those elephants jamming to a band I thoroughly enjoy: Kenya's Just a Band. (the song has its own, awesome video). This video also made me think: if Budweiser can make a commercial with Clydesdales playing American football, surely Tusker can make one with elephants playing real football? Anyways, enjoy!

Friday, April 12, 2013

Friday Music Video - Our Time is Running Out

With less than a month left of graduate school, I dedicate this song to you, SIPA. Particularly the lyrics such as:
I wanted freedom
Bound and restricted
I tried to give you up
But I'm addicted

...and...

Our time is running out
Our time is running out
You can't push it underground
You can't stop it screaming out
How did it come to this?




Seriously, time flies when you're reading painfully long scholarly articles...

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Support this Book - Letter to Momo

I often promote my friends' awesome work here, and this post will highlight another great project: Letters to Momo. My friend and classmate, Alejandro Souza, is publishing a collection of the daily letters he wrote to his imprisoned cousin. Alejandro is one of those people that you expect to succeed in anything he does, yet his success never gets in the way of his values. He wears his heart on his sleeve, and this book is a testament to that lifestyle (one we could all emulate a bit more, probably - especially the cynical folks like myself). Alejandro describes the motivation to begin the letter-writing project as follows:
A truly compassionate, loving, and caring person only a year my junior, Momo has always been my closest friend in the family. Although we lived in different countries most of our lives, no physical distance ever kept us from communicating. Crushed by his imprisonment and the realization that he had been facing this situation alone for months, I made an unconditional commitment to live the experience as close to him as I possibly could.
My mind was made: I resolved to write him one letter each day for as long as he was in jail.
The motivation to write to Momo, and now to share the letters with the world, can perhaps be summed up best in Alejandro's simple phrase: "Because nobody should walk alone."

Here is a video of Alejandro describing the project:

In addition to the chance to share this work, I like this additional goal of the project: "Donate books to prisons, rehabilitation centers, homeless shelters, and other support centers all over the world."

As you may be able to tell, the project aims to deliver inspiration to people in any situation where they need support. I cannot think of a better ideal (or person) to support, so go here to lend a few dollars to the campaign. And as usual with kickstarters, each pledge level comes with different unique rewards, so check it out in full!

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Tuesday Tunes - T.I.A.

Today I finished my last midterm (ever), a written exam in Chris Blattman's "Political Economy of Development: Africa and the World" class. Exhausting. Since I am heading to the above-mentioned continent for a week soon, I think I earned a little K'naan:


Friday, March 8, 2013

Mural of Equality

A friend of mine is an artist-in-residence / teaching muralist. She has done some pretty cool projects with students on various topics. Her most recent mural is so cool I just had to share it:


Her blog explains the process and the results, and it is well worth the read in full. An excerpt:
One girl had the idea to have protestors as a consistent element all the way across the mural, but changing according to whoever they were next to. For example, the protestors next to Chavez would be holding signs that said different things than the protestors next to Susan B. Anthony. Genius!!
 

More about the artist's business here.

Since it is International Women's Day, here is a close-up of the Susan B. Anthony portion:

Friday, March 1, 2013

Friday Music Video: Night Panther

A friend of mine is in a cool "new-to-me" band called Night Panther (not to be confused with another friend's favorite band, Steel Panther). Night Panther is pretty sweet, playing Synth Pop, or as souncloud clasifies them, "sex pop." (Also, the band seems to have originated in my mom's former town of Doylestown, PA). They are playing tonight in NYC at Pianos, check them out if you are around. They will also be at SXSW this year for those of you lucky enough (cool enough?) to attend that extravaganza.

Here is their video for Fever, which has a Sabotage-feel to it (the video not the music):


Musically, I like the newer Lioness song, which has a video coming soon - Trailer below:



Disclaimer: Just because I know people (or know people who know people) in pretty hip bands does not make me hip - as evidenced by my use of the word "hip" - or even mildly qualified to recommend music (for that, rely on Fritz).

Monday, February 25, 2013

Job Hunt: Career Panel Edition

Earlier this week, I attended a career panel featuring professionals in the field of Development Practice. Each panelist spoke about his/her own experience as SIPA graduates working in development (in very different ways). The panelists were: Annie Feighery, Co-Founder and CEO of mWater; Judith Kallick Russell, M&E Consultant; and Manav Sachdeva, Civil Affairs Officer with the UN in Afghanistan. So as I mentioned, quite different career paths there. Manav started out by telling everyone to: "Wake Up! Wake up wake up wake up."


He meant, "wake up" to the fact that we need to get jobs at the end of the year. He implored us all to think of May 17th as a hard deadline, and to work 3-4 hours a day towards securing a job before then. Be honest with yourself about your needs, and go get a job.

Now, most of the students in attendance were already quite anxious about that deadline, and are searching for jobs quite frantically. The other panelists also chimed in with helpful advice, such as Annie's advice to acquire the skills that will get you hired in your field. In her eyes, these included language skills and coding skills (as she put it, if you know HTML5, she would hire you right now; it is nearly impossible to find someone who knows HTML5 who is not already hired).

Quick aside: I made an effort to start learning to code last year via the site Codeacademy. It is an excellent site, and I played around with some javascript. I also used some coding in a class last semester, and wrote about creating customizable Google maps on your own website elsewhere. But my learning was very, um, indiscriminate, and I need to recommit myself this year. So I am taking another shot at learning HTML so people like Annie will want to hire me! Once again, I recommend the site (some screenshot examples are below). And as another aside, I am working on my French skills a bit more, and have found some useful internet resources, like memrise and trying to understand Engrenages.

Codeacademy's lessons

and the results
There were other useful tidbits, like the difference between networking in person and via social media (Annie suggested I try the hashtag #HireChrisToday to take my job search "viral"), as well as the usefulness of moving to a location before getting a job (recommended if you know what you want, but only if you have at least one person there who can open a door for you or provide a couch on which to crash). While I did not leave with new concrete job leads, the session provided some useful food-for-thought. Now that I am "awake," it is back to the world of networking / informational interviews / job listings / etc.

Friday, February 22, 2013

Friday Music Video - The Lone Bellow

My friend's roommate is in a band, the Lone Bellow, and they are pretty sweet. Sometimes chill, sometimes haunting, sometimes kinda jamming. I've been enjoying them, maybe you will too - Check out "You Never Need Nobody" for starters.

Friday, February 1, 2013

Friday Music Video: the Pixies

I've been listening to the Pixies BBC album a lot lately, so it seemed like a good time to offer another installment of the very infrequent Friday Music Videos! In particular, I have been loving Monkey Gone to Heaven, which may or may not be perfect for a Friday afternoon.


This song reminds me of the Gorillaz' Fire Coming Out of a Monkey's Head, which is fitting because, as the video above's description notes, this "Animated Clip was created by DAMON ALBARN and JAMIE HEWLETT (yup the same guys who do the Gorillaz music vids)"

Which then led me on a search, where I found this Pixies/Gorillaz mashup. Awesome.

Final Semester: What am I Studying?

I recently started my last semester of graduate school, which means I am nearly finished with my MPA-DP degree. It seems like only yesterday I was vehemently defending my program (before even starting it). Looking back at that post, there are some points that have held up well ("I realize the main draw of the MDP program is the people") and others that may need to be re-visited after graduation ("I reject the idea that the MDP program is a reactionary leviathan opposed to new or different ideas"). The first year was tough, from economics exams to wikis to field placements, but overall it was a good experience. Starting my second year, I had enough hubris to offer unwanted advice to new development grad students. Maybe I will revisit some of those old thoughts as graduation approaches (like, am I now a part of Jeff Sachs' Army!?). For now, as my program is winding down, I thought I would provide some details on my final classes, including a reading or two from the first weeks of class. Maybe this will help my friends and family to (begin to) understand what I am studying, at long last!

This semester, I am studying:
  • Microenterprise Development - taught by DAI consultants Dan Charette and Lief Doerring. From the syllabus: "The objective of this course is to understand the role of small firms (which includes micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in agricultural and non-agricultural sectors) in developing economies and to identify and assess a range of programs and policies to promote their development." One avenue for future employment that I would love is finding and investing in promising entrepreneurs and their ideas, so this class seems like a great fit. Here is a great breakdown of different analytical approaches used in the sector, including my old friend, Value Chain Analysis. Investing in these small enterprises means investing in people wherever they live, even in middle-income countries (rather than focusing only on low-income countries). Finally, a description of the "mysterious" Informal Economy that microenterprises may or may not operate within.
  • Creating a Social Enterprise - taught by Sarah Holloway, who has launched social enterprises such as Mouse. From the syllabus: "The course will focus primarily on the knowledge and skills required to launch a new Social Enterprise." While I do not have my own entreprenurial idea at this time, this practical class is ver useful as we work through the process of helping another student get their idea off the ground. Here is an article describing the social entrepreneur, and here is how to form your mission statement (in 8 words).
  • Project Management - taught by Thomas Quaranta. From the syllabus: "Project management is defined as the application of knowledge, skills, tools and techniques to a broad range of activities in order to meet the requirements of the particular project." Not too many interesting (free) readings to share, but definitely a useful skill as I would also like to get a job managing a development project.
  • Political Economy of Development: Africa and the World - taught by Chris Blattman. While I was initially disheartened that my class would miss the capstone MPA-DP class on human ecology taught by Jeff Sachs (due to his involvement with the post-2015 development agenda), it did open up my schedule to take this class taught by everyone's favorite development blogger! From the syllabus: "Why are some countries so poor, repressive, and violent? Why have some seen growing incomes and freedoms while others stagnate or decline? What is the root of state capacity, political participation, and other aspects of “political development”? What role has the West played in both failure and success, and what role (if any) should it play in future? The goal is to get students to think critically about development theory and practice." Sounds like my kind of class, no? (and it is working against that potential "groupthink" I mentioned above). We have had some dense economic reading, but also some interesting pieces, like How to Write About Africa (see the video below for the author's reaction) and Poor Economics, which I have previously written about a bit.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Madagascar in the Top 5!... in 2013 Coup Risk Estimates

Recently, Jay Ulfelder updated his statistical coup d'etat forecasts for 2013. His model gained some notoriety after 2 of his top-10 countries in the 2012 forecast, Guinea-Bissau and Mali, experienced coups. The entire post is well-worth the read and can be found here. Here is a probability listing:
Max Fisher used Ufelder's post to visualize the data in a map (hat tip to A View From The Cave on Ufelder's index and Fisher's post). It is pretty interesting:


Now, Ufelder himself "quibbled" with the color-coding, saying, “the statistical models we can build with available data just aren’t precise enough to sort countries that finely, at least not in a reliable way," and added further clariciations at the end of Fisher's post. He regularly points out that we should not read too much into these numbers. So what am I about to do? Read too much into these numbers, and as usual my focus is Madagascar (*).

Madagascar "moved up a spot" this year, from 5 to 4, and the probability of a coup increased from about 0.8 in 2012 to about 0.10 in 2013. Now, we could explore everything that went into the algorithms, or bemoan the inclusion of Madagascar at the top of an ignomious poll once again (for details on Ufelder's algorithms, see his 2012 post). But rather than focusing on the prediction formulas and Madagascar's ranking, let's analyze the likelihood of a coup d'etat from a qualitative perspective. With the hopes of elections in 2013, it seems like a great time to ask: could Madagascar experience an attempted coup in 2013?

Potential Factor 1: Elections
The protagonists, former President Marc Ravalomanana and transition President Andry Rajoelina, have both pledged they will not run in the 2013 presidential election. Some observers are already hailing this as a major victory for the SADC's mediation efforts. Yet is it such a success? Despite his statement, Rajoelina seems reluctant to give up power, pushing back the presidential election date and simultaneously vowing to return in 2018. This is not a man who is done with politics. Many observers (myself included) question his motives, as he has broken promises numerous times in this process.
Scenario 1a: Rajoelina's reluctance to give up power (pre-election) leads to a coup to overthrow him [the military responds to Malagasy leaders' demands for impartiality and to act in the interest of the nation]
Scenario 1b: Rajoelina's reluctance to give up power (post-election) leads to a coup to keep him in power [since the military is in his pocket (see Factor 2)]
Scenario 1c: With the two major political forces out of the race and no commanding presence to replace them (seriously, who is next?), the military picks no side and the elections proceed relatively smoothly
Scenario 1d: Rajoelina delays the presidential vote indefinitely, then reconsiders his options based on the legislative election.
Analysis: Honestly, I think Rajoelina will delay the election indefinitely. He may wait to see how his supporters do in the legislative round before deciding if he needs to stick to his promise on the presidential election. If at that point he does stand down, the military will sit out the election. Most of their involvement in politics has been to support one opponent or another, not as an independent force (see below). I cannot see the military rising up against Rajoelina, and if he wanted them to rise against an opponent, he would need a popular opponent who also has many detractors throughout the nation. As of now, does any such Malagasy politician exist?
 
Aza Manadino ("Don't forget")
Potential Factor 2: Military
In 2009, the military only turned against Ravalomanana late in the crisis. Even then, it was a pacified coup: I remember tanks rolling through the capital, right past the presidential palace, a few days before the soldiers actually stormed the palace. I guess it was a warning (or bad directions?), but the point is the military did not want it to be a fight. I often refer to it as a political coup d'etat rather than a military one. Indeed, there have been quite a few "coup attempts" by the military, but as I summed up a few years ago, none were too impressive. The most recent "coup attempt" was subdued quickly with payoffs, and conspiracy theorists structured semi-plausible ideas where Rajoelina supporters constructed the attempt to delay political negotiations to end the crisis. Unlikely, but that did lead me to re-examine the state of the Malagasy armed forces. We saw then a top-heavy institution which Rajoelina liberally littered with promotions and pay-raises to maintain officer loyalties. He recently promoted another 26 officers, so he should be confident of their present support.
Scenario 1a: The military rises against Rajoelina
Scenario 1b: The military rises to keep Rajoelina in power
Scenario 1c: The military does nothing, biding its time while awaiting an electoral victor (and possibly a new patron)
Analysis: 1a is no good - Rajoelina's support is too strong. 1b may sound like a possibility, but 1c strikes me as the most plausible: the military should know it can receive similar favors from any leader who wants to stay in power. Furthermore, a free-and-fair election should open the floodgates of foreign aid once again, and that may help increase the military's budget along with the rest of the national budget (along with international training programs and cooperation).

Potential Factor 3: Munitions
What about the proliferation of small arms in Madagascar over the last few years? Tananews had a fascinating example of this, focusing on the UK's concerns over their firearm sales to Madagascar. "MP Bob Stewart acknowledged that the UK has issued export licences for enough weapons to Madagascar and Oman to “make a pretty good army”." Anecdotal reports do seem to confirm that violence is up, and there seem to be more guns in the country. Yet for the most part, these are used for banditry and other crimes. The British seem concerned their weapons will have a political effect: "Arms exported from the UK should not serve to help perpetuate an illegitimate leader in power or to prolong a political and economic crisis." In reality, and as the report mentions, many of the weapons leak out of the military and police to private citizens for purposes of cattle thievery (Dahalo), rosewood harvesting, or other criminal activity. It is difficult to see how more weapons could lead to a coup (or a counter-coup); after all, if the military want to bring down a regime or prop one up, they will not have any real competition. Unless the political environment changes drastically in the next few months and the military splits (or the army takes one side and the gendarmerie the other), I think this is a non-factor in terms of coup potential; in terms of the overall safety environment, it is quite concerning. But then, people who want to rob you will find a way to do it, whether with a gun, a knife, or a brick.

Conclusion
There are many other factors, of course. We could look at all of the pieces of Ufelder's quantitative algorithms through a qualitative lens. But that would be (even more) tedious. The existence of previous coup attempts, coupled with an on-going political crisis, a worsening economic situation, and the potential for a humanitarian disaster, lend credence to Ufelder's prediction of Madagascar as a probably coup victim. But I think the evidence points away from a real coup, and I know the Malagasy people are tired of violent changes. In fact, I still think a story from late 2009 displays the level of disinterest in the entire political crisis:
I was in my new market town/postal town, and was talking with one of the postal employees...We were talking about why Peace Corps left, citing the uncertain safety situation as a result of the “transfer of power” without getting into politics. I said we were able to return, and that living in the Ambanivohitra (countryside) we are removed from all the danger and political rallies and general craziness. His response was very poignant; he said that life in the ambanivohitra never really changes, no matter who is in power or what the people in the cities are doing. “Life is always hard in the ambanivohitra,” he said, “always difficult – sarotra faona.”
And that was 3 years ago! Alright, time to wrap up this post. While lengthy, it was funworking through some thoughts. Feel free to share your own, and while you should not assume the above quantitative model means Madagascar will have a coup, do check out Ufelder's blog on this and other topics!

(*) Another interesting country in the top 10 is Timor-Leste, a country that is being heralded as a post-conflict success story after the UN's departure. Ufelder again urges caution though, noting: "Layered on top of Timor-Leste’s high poverty and hybrid political authority patterns, that recent coup activity greatly increases the country’s estimated risk. If Timor-Leste makes it through 2013 without another coup attempt, though, its estimated risk should drop sharply next year."