Prior to 2005, the United States and a few Western allies planned and implemented action while the rest of the world watched. Zakaria says this changed by 2008. Do the 2011 and 2012 developments in the Middle East and North Africa support or refute Zakaria? Explain your reasoning. ...[Show More]
4 years ago
The events of 2011 and 2012 in North Africa and the Middle East suggest how the population in those regions believes it is their time to have good governance, and be a force in the world happenings (Zakarias, 2008). Citizens in these regions rose against the sitting administrations that were not tired of occupying power. The springs were crucial in the removal of dictators from power. Despite the setback, in support of Zakarias, these regions are set to be a force to reckon with, especially on matters previously run by the U.S and western allies.
By Steve 4 years ago . Marked as helpful (821). Marked as unhelpful (780)
Public organizations at the Federal, State, and Local levels of government have taken on the challenge of bridging the digital divide. Identify and de...
By Professor Henry · 3 years ago
We discussed the three cornerstones of open government; transparency, collaboration, and participation. Identify and briefly discuss an example of an...
By CPA Guru · 3 years ago
Discuss representation, participation, and voter turnout in local elections. What trends do you see, and what are their impacts?...
By Steve · 3 years ago
Zakaria continues to write. In 2011 he updated his views originally expressed in The Post-American World? What did he say?...
By Tutorseno · 4 years ago
Zakaria argues that the West lagged the East centuries ago. Do you think we are returning to such a situation? Explain your reasoning and cite a sourc...
By Tutorseno · 4 years ago