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BYBEE, ASHLEY NEESE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   131093


Neglected but affected: voices from the oil-producing regions of Ghana and Uganda / Bybee, Ashley Neese; Johannes, Eliza Mary   Journal Article
Bybee, Ashley Neese Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The 'resource curse' is the paradoxical theory frequently used to explain how a seemingly desirable asset, such as oil, can actually pervert an economy, erode governance, perpetuate conflict, and ruin local communities to the extent that it becomes a curse. New oil discoveries in western Ghana and western Uganda have raised concerns for the democratic prospects and future stability of these countries and their surrounding regions. Based on field interviews in these oil-producing regions, this report summarises how local communities have been affected thus far and their concerns for the future. The authors assess the extent to which each country is vulnerable to oil-induced instability, and identify groups or communities that would be most likely to perpetuate it. Lastly, it provides some assessment of the future trajectory of each country.
Key Words Security  Oil  Uganda  Ghana  Resource Curse  Instability 
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ID:   117959


Twenty-first century expansion of the transnational drug trade / Bybee, Ashley Neese   Journal Article
Bybee, Ashley Neese Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract In the last decade, West Africa emerged as a major transit hub for Latin American Drug Trafficking Organizations (DTOs) transporting cocaine to Western Europe. Since that time, there has been cause for hope and despair. The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), and an array of international donors have made great strides in acknowledging the growing problem of drug trafficking and have implemented practical measures to stem this flow. All the while, the fears of many observers have been confirmed as the insidious effects of the drug trade have begun to take effect in many West African states. Consumption is on the rise and narco-corruption now undermines the rule of law and legitimate economic growth necessary for development and stability. One of the most alarming trends that place Africa and Africans on the radar of policy makers, law enforcement, and researchers alike is the number of new fronts on which the illicit drug trade is growing. Its geographic expansion beyond the relatively confined region of West Africa is now endangering East and Southern Africa. The arrival of new drugs to the region-heroin and Amphetamine-Type Stimulants (ATS, commonly referred to as synthetic drugs)-has been accompanied by the discovery of local manufacturing facilities to process them. Lastly, the growing level of involvement by Africans-who initially served as facilitators but now appear to be taking a more proactive role-raises concerns that a new generation of African DTOs is rising in the ranks. This paper examines how each of these trends are contributing to the twenty-first century expansion of the drug trade in Africa and summarizes some of the impacts they are having on the states and their populations.
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