The outbreak of violence in Sudan isn’t an anomaly; the world's civil wars are growing longer and deadlier. Robert Guest, The Economist’s deputy editor, explains why. 00:00 - Civil wars are getting longer 00:58 - Complexity 02:14 - Criminality 03:12 - Climate change 04:52 - The road to peace? Sign up to The Economist’s daily newsletter: https://econ.st/3QAawvI The world’s deadliest war last year wasn’t in Ukraine: https://econ.st/3MRXH0T Why is Sudan on the brink of civil war, again?: https://econ.st/43z5EOy Listen: “Someone in Khartoum this morning described it as ‘like Call of Duty’”—deadly fighting in Sudan: https://econ.st/41iPh7n Why has civil war returned to Ethiopia?: https://econ.st/43EIEOe Myanmar’s civil war has moved to its heartlands: https://econ.st/41nqlvp The effects on Turkey of Syria’s civil war: https://econ.st/41t6ZVo Myanmar’s civil war is becoming bloodier and more brutal: https://econ.st/3L8qtJo Ethiopia’s civil war has been bad news for press freedom: https://econ.st/41iwqt6 How not to administer justice after a brutal civil war: https://econ.st/43FB1qQ How to stop countries sliding back into civil war: https://econ.st/3mK3IlQ The world should not ignore the horrors of eastern Congo: https://econ.st/43EF2fd Fighting in the Sahel has forced 1.7m people from their homes: https://econ.st/3oqObYr |
Tags: Featured,newsletter
20 pings
Skip to comment form ↓