Filed under: africa | Tags: consumer theory, economics, Eddie Vedder, into the Wild, Jerry Hannan, jerry hannan society, microeconomic theory, microeconomics, monotonicity in consumer choice, Pearl Jam, proofs, QED, quod erat demonstrandum, rationalizability, society, Stanford University
I doubt my microeconomics prof. (Kyle) reads this blog so I am gonna go ahead and quote a section of an email he just sent out (which also just made my evening):
For fun for those of you still reading, you can find a lyrical justification of monotonicity in consumer choice in the song Society by Jerry Hannan. This was covered by Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam for the film Into the Wild. The free version can be listened to here jerryhannan.com. The justification is contained in this stanza:
“There’s those thinking, more or less, less is more
But if less is more, how you keepin’ score
Means for every point you make your level drops
Kinda like you’re starting from the top
You can’t do that.”QED. There you go. An indie folk proof for rational preferences.
Here’s Jerry Hannan’s “Society” on youtube:
Filed under: africa | Tags: Africa Confidential, drug trafficking, equatorial guinea, Kenyan drug traffickers, Michael Jackson, Peter Gastrow, Peter Gastrow Report, Smith, teodorin obiang, theodore obiang mbasogo
Teodorin Obiang’s free ride is over. The son of the Equatorian dictator has had some of his wealth seized by the US government on suspicion of money laundering. For more on Equatorial Guinea read Ian Birrell‘s piece at the Guardian here.
Check out the Peter Gastrow Report on Transnational Organized Crime and State Erosion in Kenya. The juicy bits are between pages 47-50. The thick and thin of it is that very senior Kenyan politicians are implicated. For a related earlier post on drug trafficking click here.
Smith at African Confidential discusses the Kenyan involvement in Somalia, with an added section on the complexity of the intervention. He also raises questions about the link between al-Shabab and piracy and touches a bit on why the organization could yet find a fertile ground for recruitment on the Kenyan coast.
Filed under: africa | Tags: Al-Shabab, eastleigh, eastleigh Nairobi, grenade explosion, Kenya at War, Kibaki, Kismayu, Mogadishu, Mwai Kibaki, Nairobi, otc, Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed
QUICK UPDATE:
Two separate minor explosions rocked Nairobi in the last 24 hours, one at a club on Mfangano Street and another at OTC. One person has been confirmed dead and several people were injured. By targeting ordinary Kenyans in the eastern reaches of the city (instead of other soft targets in upper class parts of town) al-Shabab’s strategy seems to be one of forcing the Kenyan public to pressure the government to stop the military operation in Somalia.
My hunch is that they are mistaken. The Kenyan military did not go into Somalia because of public pressure but because of a desire to restore confidence in the tourism sector and possibly after a little prodding from the US and France. And killing innocent Kenyans will only harden public resolve to have the al-Shabab kicked out of Eastleigh.
*********************************************
Somali President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed says Kenya’s campaign against Al-Shabaab rebels should not go beyond training Somali soldiers and provision of logistical support in specified and agreed areas.
Speaking while on a visit to the the frontline of the war between his government’s forces and the Al-Shabaab, President Sharif stated that many Somalis were anxious to know more about the military operations reportedly being carried out inside Somalia by Kenyan troops.
Several factors can explain why a beleaguered president, unable to leave a restricted section in his capital, would oppose help that could help stabilize his country.
- It could be a domestic politics issue. Leaders of occupied states – e.g. Afghanistan and Iraq – often have to juggle the dual roles of public opposition and private support of foreign troops in their territory. Understood this way, we should brush aside Sharif Sheikh Ahmed’s opposition to the Kenyan troop presence in Somalia as a mere PR exercise.
- The invasion could be harming the president’s interests. After two decades of life without a central government nearly all of the Somali elite have dirty hands. Mr. Ahmed, himself was once the commander in chief of the Islamic Courts Union, a parent of al-Shabab. He is also from South Somalia, where Kenyan troops are currently stationed. By routing al-Shabab and all potential for organized armed organization, the Kenyan invasion might actually be taking the rug from under Ahmed’s feet. His election to the Somali presidency was not because he was the most peaceful of the warlords.
- The invasion might undermine other interests within Somalia that the president relies on. The piracy trade on the Indian Ocean is a lucrative business that is allegedly fueling the property boom in Kenya, especially in Nairobi. I would be surprised no one in Mogadishu had a hand in this and other shady operations such as gun-running in the wider Eastern African region. Kenyan stated goal of capturing Kismayu will most certainly disrupt these businesses, with huge financial consequences for the real Big Men involved. Mr. Ahmed might just be protecting the interests of those he depends on.
Whatever the case one hopes that Somalis in the south of the country will not, in their president’s utterances, find justification to actively undermine the Kenyan mission to deny al-Shabab of an operating base.
Meanwhile two grenade explosions have hit Nairobi in the last 24 hours, with one person confirmed dead.
Also, after a week of rallying around the flag in support of Operation Linda Nchi, the Kenyan media is beginning to ask questions about planning and long-term efficacy of the Somalia mission. It is unclear just how much uncertainty, about their own physical security, Kenyans will tolerate as the government continues to execute the war against Al-Shabab.
Filed under: africa | Tags: all blacks, Auckland, Dagg, Dan Carter, France, haka, irb rugby world cup, kiwis, new zealand, Piri Weepu, Richie McCaw, spring boks
New Zealand just won the rugby world cup after a 24-year wait. The other finalists, France, put up a most spirited fight. The final score was 8-7. I wish the Boks had gone all the way but for the next four years the All Blacks will be worthy world champions.
Here is presenting the NZ Herald:
Filed under: africa | Tags: animal behavior, Big Cats, Gauteng, Johannesburg, Kevin Richardson, lions, Pretoria, Private Game reserve, south africa, Wildlife
This is some scary stuff (don’t worry, no one gets hurt):
Filed under: africa | Tags: Kenya, William Easterly, Millenium Villages, sauri, Jeffrey sachs, The White Man's Burden, siaya, millenium development goals, randomized control trials, Michael R. Clemens, Michael Clemens, center for global development, impact evaluation, Prabhjot Singh, the end of poverty and the economic possibilities of our time, the millenium challenge account
How successful are millenium villages as crucibles for experimentation on development? And can we measure their impact?
Sachs defended the project’s claims of impact based on before-and-after analysis. He and Prabhjot Singh wrote that one cannot compare trends at the intervention sites to trends elsewhere:
“The logic is also flawed. In a single-intervention study at the individual level (e.g. for a new medicine) one can have true controls (one group gets the medicine, the other gets a placebo or some other medicine). With communities, there are no true controls. Life changes everywhere, in the MVs and outside of them.”
In other words, they claim, comparing trends at the intervention sites to trends in other areas is illegitimate, because things are changing everywhere.
This is where it gets ugly, because the above is just bizarrely wrong.
Check out the rest of what Michael Clemens (of the CGD) has to say on this here.
Filed under: africa | Tags: democracy, democratic transition, Elite Power Dispersion and the Global Spread of Democracy, Institutions, limited government, Max Weber, protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism, protestant missionaries, robert d. woodberry, University of Texas at Austin, Weber Through the Back Door: Protestant Competition
This article explores Protestantism’s inadvertent, historic role in dispersing elite power and spurring democracy. Economic and political elites typically hoard resources and perpetuate class distinction. Conversionary Protestants undermined this social reproduction because they wanted everyone to read the Bible in their own language, decide individually what to believe, and create religious organizations outside state control. Thus, they consistently initiated mass education, mass printing and civil society and spurred competitors to copy. Resultant power dispersion altered elite incentives and increased the probability of stable democratic transitions.
I test my historical arguments statistically via the spread of Protestant and Catholic missionaries. Protestant missions account for about half the variation in non-European democracy and remove the influence of variables that dominate current research. These findings challenge scholars to reformulate theories about cultural vs. structure, and about the rise of democracy.
That is Woodberry of UT Austin in a rather provocative paper that will soon hit the printing press. The paper is a reminder of how much we still don’t know about the mechanisms that produce democracy and limited government – and by extension general institutional development.
You can find a copy here.
Filed under: africa | Tags: african studies, bruce hall, pius adesanmi, Stanford, student forum for african studies
“The Black Atlantic: Colonial and Contemporary Exchanges”
October 28-29, 2011
Stanford Humanities Center
Friday, Oct. 28
Registration 2:00-2:30pm
Opening Keynote (Bruce Hall, Duke University) 2:30-3:45pm
Panel I 4:00-5:30pm
Trading Race: Colonial and Contemporary perceptions of Race
Panelists:
1. Dana Linda (UCLA) White Noise, Black Masks: Recapturing Race in Hispanic Caribbean Prison Narratives
2. Michael Ugorji (Johannes Gutenberg-Universität, Germany) Being Black in a Post-slavery, Post-Darwinian World: The Persistence of Victimage
3. Sarah Quesada (Stanford University) García Márquez, and the Daughters of the Diaspora in a Selected Corpus.
4. Fatoumata Seck (Stanford University) Bouqui and Malice, a Caribbean counter-poetics
Panel II 5:45-7:15pm
The Diaspora in Circulation: The Aesthetic Politics of Cultural Production
Panelists:
1. Krishna Barua (Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati) Inventing the Truth: Maya Angelou’s ‘I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings’
2. I. Augustus Durham (Princeton Theological Seminary) The (In)Visibility of a Frenzied Reality: W. E. B. Du Bois’ as Conjure Man in ‘The Souls of Black Folk’
3. Joy White (University of Greenwich) From Rhythm and Blues to Grime: Black Atlantic Exchanges and the Performance of Identity
4. Robert Hanserd (Northern Illinois University) Obayifo to Obeah: Priestly Power and other elements of Afro-Atlantic Akan Identity
Appetizers, wine, mingling and music 7:30-8:30pm
* * *
Saturday, Oct. 29
Breakfast 7:45-8:15am
Panel III 8:15-9:45am Crossing the Space in Between: representations and belonging in Ghana, Haiti, Senegal and Somalia
Panelists:
1. Michael Ralph (New York University) Forensics of Debt: Militarism and Modern Credit Debt in the French Atlantic Empire
2. Scott Stabler (Grand Valley State University) and Mary Owusu University of Cape Coast, Ghana) Global Slavery: Lost in Trans-lation
3. Marwa H. Ghazali (University of Kansas) Is My Baby Too Black: slavery, silence and self-imagination among Somali Bantu refugees in Kansas City
4. Christine Mobley (Duke University) Central Africans in the Haitian Revolution
Panel IV 10:00–11:30am Colonial Constructions of Race
Panelists:
1. Nicholas Jones (New York University) Let’s Play a Game of Chess! Situating the Presence of Race, Slavery, and the Horizontal Migratory Movement of a Mulata Slave in Lope de Vega’s Servir a señor discreto.
2. Myriam Chancy (University of Cincinnati) Return to My Native Land ?: Investigating the Discursive Landscape of African Pilgrimages in Contemporary Postcolonial Travel Narratives
3. Elizabeth Spragins (Stanford University) Grey Shades of Blackness in Zurara’s Cronica da Guine
4. Marzia Milazzo (University of California, Santa Barbara) ‘Capturing the Black Experience in Latin America’?: Diasporic Identity and Anti-Racist Discourse in the Works of the Afro-Panamanian Writer Cubena
Faculty Roundtable 11:45-1pm
Faculty:
1. Elisabeth Mudimbe-Boyi (Stanford University, French and Comparative Literature)
2. Lisa Surwillo (Stanford University, Iberian and Latin American Cultures)
3. Richard Roberts (Stanford University, History)
Keynote lunch by Pius Adesanmi 1-2pm
Sponsors:
Center for African Studies, The Humanities Center, The Division for Literatures, Cultures, and Languages, The Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies, Department of Anthropology, Department of History, Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity, Department of English, and the Department of Sociology.
This is an interdisciplinary conference, and all are welcome to attend!
For more information please contact Melina Platas at mplatas [at] stanford [dot] edu.


