الفيدرالية في اليمن: من شعار سياسي إلى مدخل واقعي لبناء الدولة
Author: Muaamar Bawtil – لم يعد النقاش حول مستقبل الدولة في اليمن ترفاً فكرياً أو سجالاً نخبوياً معزولاً عن الواقع.
Author: Muaamar Bawtil – لم يعد النقاش حول مستقبل الدولة في اليمن ترفاً فكرياً أو سجالاً نخبوياً معزولاً عن الواقع.
Author: Muaamar Batawil – The debate over Yemen’s future state structure is no longer an intellectual luxury or an elite discussion detached from reality.
Author: Sagar Manandhar – The recent federal and provincial elections in Nepal demonstrate the country’s continued progress toward federalism and the emergence of new political actors challenging the traditional parties.
Author: Soumaya Marhnouj – In the age of digital technology, it has become the norm to rely more upon online applications for access to public services and programs as internet connectivity has proliferated. In Canada, 98% of households have access to fixed broadband internet access, and more than 87% have a home Internet subscription. Furthermore, over 88% of the population have a smartphone and 45% of them check their smartphone every 30 minutes. Not only are people more interconnected than ever, but technology is increasingly relied upon in a manner that would have been unimaginable just a few decades ago. We see this technological shift in almost every aspect of life; government actors, government services, and public information should be no exception. Federal and unitary governments worldwide are embracing – and being expected to embrace – technology in the exercise of their functions. Central and subnational governments can use these technologies to fulfill primary goals in service provision, including “improving efficiency and service quality by reducing service lead times, increasing transparency, and offering seamless service provision across organizations.” This practice is known as digital government.
Author: Victoria Rose King – Since the end of the Cold War, the frequency with which federalism has been adopted as a peacebuilding tool in deeply divided states has increased. This is due to its perceived “ability to satisfy the aspirations and demands of both minority and majority groups: giving minority groups (limited) control over their own economic, political and social affairs, while also sustaining the territorial integrity of the extant state” (Anderson & Keil, 2017).