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Saturday, November 21, 2015

How is Rwanda outperforming 139 countries on gender equality

“There are quite a few theories for this and certainly one of them is that after the genocide there has been much lower numbers of men who are able and willing to be working. So that has changed the dynamics,” explained Saadia Zahidi of the World Economic Forum.
The 1994 genocide, aimed at the country’s minority Tutsi population, saw more than 1 million people slaughtered by extremist Hutus. The widows who were left behind banded together and demanded power.
They then changed Rwanda’s constitution to require that women hold at least 30 per cent of top political roles. Now the country’s parliament has the highest percentage of women in the world, Zahidi says.
Rwanda also performs better than Canada (and many other more developed nations) when it comes to women’s participation in the work force and wage equality.

Canada’s gender equality shortcomings

Globally, women are only now earning what men earned nearly a decade ago: $11,000 annually, on average. Meanwhile, men’s average pay has nearly doubled to $21,000 worldwide.
gender-pay-gap-then-and-now
In Canada, the estimated earned income is $40,000 for men, $35,014 for women, on average.
The wage gap is one of our biggest areas where progress needs to be made, based on the report. The other is the lack of women in leadership roles.
A lack of female representation on the political front also weighed us down, but the findings were based on our previous government. Zahidi thinks we’ll see a boost in next year’s report.

Rwanda ranks higher in gender equality than Canada: report

Women around the world only have 118 more years to go before they’re paid as much as men, according to the 2015 Global Gender Gap Report.
In Canada, the outlook is a little brighter: we only have 47-and-a-half years to go to reach gender parity (at least if things keep going at the current pace).
Our country currently ranks 30th out of 145 countries examined by the World Economic Forum.
Its 10th annual study looks at the gender gap on the following fronts:
  • Economic participation and opportunity (salaries, participation in the workforce and leadership)
  • Education (access to basic and higher levels of education)
  • Political empowerment(representation in decision-making structures)
  • Health and survival (life expectancy and sex ratio at birth)
Canada came in behind Cuba (#29) and the U.S. (#28).
Seventeen European countries beat us (the Nordic nations — Iceland, Finland, Norway and Sweden — took the top four spots; the three least equitable countries were Syria, Pakistan and Yemen).
gender-pay-gap-top-10

France urges EU leaders to toughen borders against extremists

– France called Friday on its European Union partners to take immediate and decisive action to toughen the bloc’s borders and prevent the entry of more violent extremists.
“We can’t take more time. This is urgent,” Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said.
One week after the co-ordinated attacksclaimed by Islamic State that killed 129 people in Cazeneuve and the other EU interior and justice ministers opened an emergency meeting on the next steps to take to prevent more bloodshed. France and Belgium were expected to urge their EU partners to tighten gun laws, toughen border security and choke off funds to extremist groups.
“Terrorists are crossing the borders of the European Union,” said Cazeneuve, underlining why the 28-nation bloc must move forward on a long-delayed system for collecting and exchanging airline passenger information. That system would allow the EU to better track extremists and foreign fighters coming and going from Syria and Iraq, he said.
Britain’s interior minister, Theresa May, said the EU must quickly implement beefed-up border security measures already agreed on, saying there was a clear link between tightened borders and the safety of Europeans.
Ministers, however, were not expected to order any new measures that could be immediately introduced. Documents prepared for the meeting and seen by The Associated Press indicate the ministers instead will try to push forward on priorities already identified, but not acted on, by EU leaders following an earlier round of lethal attacks in Paris on a satirical newspaper and a kosher grocery in January.
The narrative provided by French officials on the brazen and carefully co-ordinated attacks a week ago on France’s national stadium and Paris cafes, restaurants and a theatre raises disturbing questions about how a wanted militant already suspected of involvement in multiple plots could slip into Europe undetected.
French investigators quickly identified Belgian-born Abdelhamid Abaaoud, 28, as the architect of the attacks in Paris, but believed he had co-ordinated the assaults against a soccer stadium, cafes and a rock concert from the battlefields of Syria.
That situation changed drastically on Monday when France received a tip from a non-European country that Abaaoud had slipped back into Europe through Greece, Cazeneuve said Thursday.
“It was a big surprise when the intelligence came in,” one French police official told AP, speaking on condition of anonymity because the information was sensitive. “There were many people who didn’t take it seriously, but effectively it was confirmed.”
How and when Abaaoud entered France before his death remained unclear. He had bragged in the Islamic State group’s English-language magazine that he was able to move in and out of Europe undetected.
As it turned out, not only was Abaaoud in Europe, but right under the noses of French investigators, a 15-minute walk from the Stade de France stadium where three suicide bombers blew themselves up during the Nov. 13 attacks that also wounded hundreds.
Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said Abaaoud was traced to the apartment in Saint-Denis through phone taps and surveillance. Following a lengthy police assault, the suspected plot ringleader and his cousin both died in a hail of bullets and explosions.
The Paris prosecutor’s office says that a third body – of an unidentified woman – was found overnight in the apartment.
The whereabouts of another suspected accomplice remains unclear, France’s national police chief said Friday.
Jean-Marc Falcone, speaking on France-Info radio, said he was unable to say if Salah Abdeslam, a friend of Abaaoud, could be back on French territory.
“We can’t say anything about the exact geographic situation of that individual,” he said.
European officials earlier acknowledged that French police stopped Abdeslam the morning after Friday’s attacks at the Belgian border but then let him go. His brother Brahim was one of the Paris suicide bombers.
Authorities initially gave Abaaoud’s age as 27, but on Thursday Paris prosecutors said he was 28. News of his death seemed to ease some tension in a country deeply shocked by the attacks.
“We now know that Abaaoud, the brain behind these attacks – one of the brains, because we must be particularly cautious, and we know what the threats are – was among the dead,” Prime Minister Manuel Valls told the lower house of the French Parliament.
On Friday French President Francois Hollande’s office said he will lead a national ceremony Nov. 27 honouring the victims of the deadliest attacks on France in decades. The ceremony will be held at the gold-domed Hotel des Invalides, where Napoleon’s tomb lies and which is seen as a symbol of France’s military and international strength.
Of the more than 350 people wounded in the attacks, scores are in critical condition, and medical authorities have warned that the death toll is likely to rise.
Under grey skies and rain, Paris on Friday marked a week since the bloodbath with silence and reflection.
Most demonstrations have been banned in the city since the attacks, but Parisians have been spontaneously gathering all week outside the restaurants, cafes and concert halls hit in the attacks to leave flowers, light candles or hold quiet vigils.
A demonstration planned Friday at France’s oldest mosque to show inter-community solidarity after the attacks was cancelled for security concerns.
Next week Hollande is going to Washington and Moscow to push for a stronger international coalition against IS. French military spokesman Col. Gilles Jaron said Thursday that French forces have destroyed 35 Islamic State targets in Syria since the attacks on

'Imminent' Terror Threat Shuts Brussels Metro


Belgium's Prime Minister said the terror alert was as a result of "quite precise information about the risk of an attack like the one that happened in Paris".
Heavily armed soldiers and police are patrolling the city amid fears at least one suspect in the Paris attacks could be in Belgium.
The website of the country's crisis centre said it had asked local authorities to cancel large events, urge people to avoid crowds and postpone soccer matches.
Belgian PM Charles Michel said the government would review the security situation towards the end of the weekend.
It comes after a meeting of top ministers, police and security services in the city, which is also home to the European Union and NATO headquarters.
A spokesman for the crisis centre said in a statement: "Following our latest evaluation... the centre has raised its terror alert to level 4, signifying a very serious threat, for the Brussels region.
"The analysis shows a serious and imminent threat requiring specific security measures as well as detailed recommendations to the population."
Sky's Enda Brady, who has arrived at the main Bruxelles Midi train station, said: "Extraordinary security scenes here. Soldiers from the Belgian army carrying assault rifles... in groups of four up and down the main concourse and on platforms.
"It's a totally surreal atmosphere. It's just extremely quiet. It's normally a very very busy station, especially at weekends. Belgian police also heavily armed. Everyone knows what's going on..."  
Belgium, and Brussels in particular, have been at the centre of investigations into the Paris attacks after it emerged that two of the suicide bombers had been living in the country.
Three people detained in Brussels are facing terrorism charges.
The brother of one of the suicide bombers, who was also living in Brussels, is still on the run.
Salah Abdeslam was briefly pulled over by French police near the Belgian border last Saturday morning along with two of those in custody.
The Federal Prosecutors Office in Brussels said on Saturday that police had searched the house of a person who was arrested on Friday and had found "a few weapons".
The last time any part of the country was put on maximum alert was in May 2014 when a gunman shot dead four people at the Jewish Museum in Brussels.

American Killed in Mali Was Mother, Peace Corps Volunteer

The American woman who was killed in the Mali hostage situation was a mother and public health worker who once volunteered for the Peace Corps, her devastated family said.
Anita Datar, 41, was one of the at least 27 killed today -- according to the UN -- when gunmen attacked the Radisson Blu Hotel in Bamako.
It's unbelievable to us that she has been killed in this senseless act of terrorism," the statement said. "She loved her family and her work tremendously."
According to her family, Datar worked as a senior manager at the consulting firm Palladium Group and was a founding board member of Tulalens, a non-profit "connecting underserved communities with quality health services."
Datar, who had a son, originally was from western Massachusetts and grew up in New Jersey. She served in the peace corps in Senegal from 1997-'99 "and has spent much of her career working to advance global health and international development, with a focus on population and reproductive health, family planning, and HIV."
"Everything she did in her life she did to help others— as a mother, public health expert, daughter, sister and friend," the statement said. "And while we are angry and saddened that she has been killed, we know that she would want to promote education and healthcare to prevent violence and poverty at home and abroad, not intolerance."
A family member said that she was in Mali "doing what she loved -- strengthening public health."
It was not clear how Datar died during the siege, during which at least three gunmen stormed the hotel, which was popular with Westerners and the UN.
Also killed was a Belgian Member of Parliament, Geoffrey Dieudonné as well as two attackers, officials said.

17 Books Everyone Should Read, According to Bill Gates

Bill Gates has a schedule that’s planned down to the minute, the entrepreneur-turned-billionaire-humanitarian still gobbles up about a book a week.
Aside from a handful of novels, they’re mostly nonfiction books covering his and his foundation’s broad range of interests. A lot of them are about transforming systems: how nations can intelligently develop, how to lead an organization, and how social change can fruitfully happen.
We went through the past five years of his book criticism to find the ones that he gave glowing reviews and that changed his perspective.
Tap Dancing to Work: Warren Buffett on Practically Everything, 1966-2012 by Carol Loomis
Warren Buffett and Gates have a famously epic bromance, what with their recommending books to each other and spearheading philanthropic campaigns together.
So it’s no surprise that Gates enjoyed Tap Dancing to Work, a collection of articles and essays about and by Buffett, compiled by Fortune magazine journalist Carol Loomis.
Gates says that anyone who reads the book cover-to-cover will walk away with two main impressions:
First, how Warren’s been incredibly consistent in applying his vision and investment principles over the duration of his career;
[S]econdly, that his analysis and understanding of business and markets remains unparalleled. I wrote in 1996 that I’d never met anyone who thought about business in such a clear way. That is certainly still the case.
Getting into the mind of Buffett is “an extremely worthwhile use of time,” Gates concludes.
Making the Modern World: Materials and Dematerialization by Vaclav Smil
Gates says his favorite author is Vaclav Smil, an environmental-sciences professor who writes big histories of things like energy and innovation.
His latest is Making the Modern World. It got Gates thinking.
“It might seem mundane, but the issue of materials — how much we use and how much we need — is key to helping the world’s poorest people improve their lives,” he writes. “Think of the amazing increase in quality of life that we saw in the United States and other rich countries in the past 100 years. We want most of that miracle to take place for all of humanity over the next 50 years.”
To know where we’re going, Gates says, we need to know where we’ve been — and Smil is one of his favorite sources for learning that.
The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History by Elizabeth Kolbert
It can be easy to forget that our present day is a part of world history. Gates says that New Yorker writer Elizabeth Kolbert’s new book The Sixth Extinctionhelps correct that.
“Humans are putting down massive amounts of pavement, moving species around the planet, over-fishing and acidifying the oceans, changing the chemical composition of rivers, and more,” Gates writes, echoing a concern that he voices in many of his reviews.
“Natural scientists posit that there have been five extinction events in the Earth’s history (think of the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs),” he continues, “and Kolbert makes a compelling case that human activity is leading to the sixth.”
To get a hint of Kolbert’s reporting, check out the series of stories that preceded the book’s publication.
Stress Test: Reflections on Financial Crises by Tim Geithner
Gates stood at the center of an enormously complex system as CEO of Microsoft. Timothy Geithner did much the same as U.S. Treasury secretary — and saw the structure fall down around him during the financial crisis.
“Geithner paints a compelling human portrait of what it was like to be fighting a global financial meltdown while at the same time fighting critics inside and outside the Administration as well as his own severe guilt over his near-total absence from his family,” Gates says. “The politics of fighting financial crises will always be ugly. But it helps if the public knows a little more about the subject.”
Stress Test provides that knowledge.
The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined by Steven Pinker
In Better Angels, Harvard cognitive scientist Steven Pinker branches out into the history of the most contentious of subjects: violence.
Gates says it’s one of the most important books he’s ever read.
“Pinker presents a tremendous amount of evidence that humans have gradually become much less violent and much more humane,” he says, in a trend that started thousands of years ago and continued until this day.
This isn’t just ivory-tower theory. Gates says the book has affected his humanitarian work.
“As I’m someone who’s fairly optimistic in general,” he says, “the book struck a chord with me and got me to thinking about some of our foundation’s strategies.”
The Man Who Fed the Worldby Leon Hesser
Even though Gates can get a meeting with almost anyone, he can’t land a sit-down with Norman Borlaug, the late biologist and humanitarian who led the “Green Revolution” — a series of innovations that kept a huge chunk of humanity from starving.
“Although a lot of people have never heard of Borlaug, he probably saved more lives than anyone else in history,” Gates says. “It’s estimated that his new seed varieties saved a billion people from starvation,” many of whom were in India and Pakistan.
Borlaug was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and the Congressional Gold Medal for his efforts — and is one of only seven people to receive that honor.
For Gates, Borlaug is a model in getting important work done in the world.
“Borlaug was one-of-a-kind,” he says, “equally skilled in the laboratory, mentoring young scientists, and cajoling reluctant bureaucrats and government officials.”
Hesser’s The Man Who Fed the World lets you peer into the personality that saved a billion lives.
Business Adventures: Twelve Classic Tales from the World of Wall Street by John Brooks
To reply, Buffett sent the Microsoft founder his personal copy of Business Adventures, a collection of New Yorker stories by John Brooks.
Though the anecdotes are from half a century ago, the book remains Gates’ favorite.
Gates says that the book serves as a reminder that the principles for building a winning business stay constant. He writes:
For one thing, there’s an essential human factor in every business endeavor. It doesn’t matter if you have a perfect product, production plan and marketing pitch; you’ll still need the right people to lead and implement those plans.
Learning of the affections that Gates and Buffett have for this title, the business press has fallen similarly in love with the book. Slate quipped that Business Adventures is “catnip for billionaires.”
The Bully Pulpit: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism by Doris Kearns Goodwin
Like us, Gates is fascinated by the way Theodore Roosevelt was able to affect his society: busting trusts, setting up a park system, and the like.
For this reason, Gates appreciates how Goodwin’s biography uses the presidency as a lens for understanding the shift of society.
“How does social change happen?” Gates asks in his review. “Can it be driven by a single inspirational leader, or do other factors have to lay the groundwork first?”
He says that TR shows how many stakeholders need to be involved.
“Although he tried to push through a number of political reforms earlier in his career,” Gates says, “[Roosevelt] wasn’t really successful until journalists at ‘McClure’s’ and other publications had rallied public support for change.”
The Rosie Project: A Novel by Graeme Simsion
Gates doesn’t review a lot of fiction, but The Rosie Project, which came on the recommendation of his wife, Melinda, is an oddly perfect fit.
“Anyone who occasionally gets overly logical will identify with the hero, a genetics professor with Asperger’s Syndrome who goes looking for a wife,” he writes. “(Melinda thought I would appreciate the parts where he’s a little too obsessed with optimizing his schedule. She was right.)”
The book is funny, clever, and moving, Gates says, to the point that he read it in one sitting.
On Immunity by Eula Biss
Even though the science all says that vaccines are among the most important inventions in human history, there’s still a debate about whether they’re a good idea.
In “On Immunity,” essayist Eula Biss pulls apart that argument.
She “uses the tools of literary analysis, philosophy, and science to examine the speedy, inaccurate rumors about childhood vaccines that have proliferated among well-meaning American parents,” Gates writes. “Biss took up this topic not for academic reasons but because of her new role as a mom.”
How Asia Works by Joe Studwell
Joe Studwell is a business journalist whose central mission is understanding “development.”
The Financial Times said that How Asia Works is “the first book to offer an Asia-wide deconstruction of success and failure in economic development.”
Gates says that the book’s thesis goes like this:
All the countries that become development success stories (1) create conditions for small farmers to thrive, (2) use the proceeds from agricultural surpluses to build a manufacturing base that is tooled from the start to produce exports, and (3) nurture both these sectors with financial institutions closely controlled by the government.
How to Lie with Statistics by Darrell Huff
Published in 1954, How to Lie with Statistics is an introduction to statistics — and a primer on how they can be manipulated.
It’s “more relevant than ever,” Gates says.
“One chapter shows you how visuals can be used to exaggerate trends and give distorted comparisons,” he says. “It’s a timely reminder, given how often infographics show up in your Facebook and Twitter feeds these days.”
Epic Measures by Jeremy Smith
Reading this biography was especially meaningful for Gates because he’s known its subject, a doctor named Chris Murray, for more than a decade.
According to Gates, the book is a “highly readable account for anyone who wants to know more about Chris’s work and why it matters.”
That work involves creating the Global Burden of Disease, a public website that gathers data on the causes of human illness and death from researchers around the world. The idea is that we can’t begin finding cures for health issues if we don’t even know what those issues are.
Writes Gates: “As Epic Measuresshows, the more we make sure reliable information gets out there, the better decisions we all can make, and the more impact we all can have.”
Stuff Matters by Mark Miodownik
If you’re like most people, you use steel razors, glass cups, and paper notepads every day without thinking much about the materials they’re made of.
In “Stuff Matters,” Miodownik, a materials scientist, aims to show you why the science behind those materials is so fascinating.
That premise might sound similar to “Making the Modern World,” a book by Gates’ favorite author Smil, which Gates has also recommended. But Gates says the two works are “completely different.” While Smil is a “facts-and-numbers guy,” Miodownik is “heavy on romance and very light on numbers,” potentially making “Stuff Matters” an easier read.
Gates claims his favorite chapter is the one on carbon, “which offers insights into one atom’s massive past, present, and future role in human life.”
Hyperbole and a Half by Allie Brosh
It might be hard to imagine Gates curled up with a book of comic drawings. But Hyperbole and a Half, based on the blog by the same name, is more moving and profound than it is silly.
The stories and drawings in the book are based on scenes from Brosh’s life, as well as her imagined misadventures.
“It’s funny and smart as hell,” Gates writes, adding that “Brosh’s stories feel incredibly — and sometimes brutally — real.”
Gates was especially moved by the parts of the book that touch on Brosh’s struggles with severe depression, including a series of images about her attempts to leave an appropriate suicide note.
It’s a rare book that can simultaneously make you laugh, cry, and think existential thoughts — but this one seems to do it.
What If? by Randall Munroe
Another book based on a blogWhat If? is a collection of cartoon-illustrated answers to hypothetical scientific questions.
Those questions range from the dystopian (“What if I took a swim in a typical spent nuclear fuel pool?”) to the philosophical (“What if everyone actually had only one soul mate, a random person somewhere in the world?”) Each question was posed by a different reader, and Munroe, a former roboticist for NASA, goes to the greatest lengths to answer it accurately through research and interviews.
The reason Munroe’s approach is a great way to learn about science is that he takes ideas that everybody understands in a general way and then explores what happens when you take those ideas to their limits. For example, we all know pretty much what gravity is. But what if Earth’s gravity were twice as strong as it is? What if it were three times as strong, or a hundred? Looking at the question in that way makes you start to think about gravity a little differently.
Bill Gates at the backtage of the musical 'Hamilton' on Broadway in New York City on Oct. 11, 2015.
Bruce Glikas—FilmMagic/Getty Images
Bill Gates at the backtage of the musical 'Hamilton' on Broadway in New York City on Oct. 11, 2015.


For anyone who’s ever wished there were someone to indulge and investigate their secret scientific fantasies, this book comes in handy.
Should We Eat Meat? by Vaclav Smil
Gates isn’t shy about proclaiming Smil, a professor emeritus at the University of Manitoba, his favorite author. In fact, he’s recommended several of Smil’s books before.
As usual, Gates writes, Smil attacks the issue of whether humans should consume meat from every possible angle. First he tries to define meat, then he looks at its role in human evolution, as well as how much meat each country consumes, the health and environmental risks, and the ethicality of raising animals for slaughter.
Gates, who was a vegetarian for a year during his 20s, is especially impressed by how Smil uses science to debunk common misconceptions, like the idea that raising meat for food involves a tremendous amount of water.
In fact, Gates writes:
Smil shows you how the picture is more complicated. It turns out that not all water is created equal. Nearly 90 percent of the water needed for livestock production is what’s called green water, used to grow grass and such. In most places, all but a tiny fraction of green water comes from rain, and because most green water eventually evaporates back into the atmosphere, it’s not really consumed.
Overall, the book left Gates feeling that eventually, “the world can meet its need for meat.”