Nora Snee
Nora Snee has completed internships at NPR Member Station WITF 89.5, the U.S Army War College Quarterly Journal, and Peacekeeping and Stability Operations Institute, NSN, and at the Clarke Forum for Contemporary Issues. She received her B.A. in international studies from Dickinson College, where she concentrated in Latin American and security studies, and lived for six months in Cameroon.
Recent rain shortages and possible effects of El Niño may intensify food insecurity in Ethiopia. Migration surged this summer as Ethiopians left for neighboring countries like Sudan , and farther, to...
China’s recent currency devaluation could have serious implications for Africa. Chinese-African trade and investment has grown substantially over the past decade. According to Geoffrey York of The Glo...
Congress failed to reauthorize the U.S. Export-Import Bank last month, which proponents say will hurt domestic businesses as well as global trade partners. The bank finances loans to subsidize the exp...
Stuck in between bigger battles on trade deals such as the TPP and the TPIP, the African Growth and Opportunity Act was renewed in late June 2015. U.S. President Obama signed the agreement on June 29,...
Africa’s rising economic strength has been the center of rhetoric, especially in the wake of the first-ever U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit in August of 2014, which created space for U.S.-African financial...
The African Development Bank is a regional multilateral institution with 78 member countries from Africa and around the world. Its goal is to reduce poverty and improve the quality of life in Africa b...
Newly re-elected Burundi President Pierre Nkurunziza won a very controversial third term last week after months of protests and violence throughout the country. Nkurunziza won 69.41 percent of the vot...