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The Duel of Africa’s Gas Corridors: An Indicator of Euro-African Geopolitical Restructuring
The 2026 relaunch of the Trans-Saharan Gas Pipeline (TSGP) is a major African geoeconomic milestone, akin to the AfCFTA. Once deemed unfeasible due to Sahel security issues, the project is now revived by a shifted strategic landscape: Europe's post-Ukraine war energy crisis, reshaped political balances in the Sahel, the rise of new regional powers, and intensifying global energy competition.
CERES
3 hours ago7 min read


Russian energy geopolitics: the Druzhba oil pipeline
In recent years, since Vladimir Putin came to power in Russia, the distribution and control over energy flows have been used as powerful tools of foreign policy by the Kremlin. Through their use, Russia has become a key trading partner for the European Union, which, until the beginning of the Russo-Ukrainian conflict in 2022, was the main destination for exports of commodities such as natural gas and oil from Russia.
CERES
May 56 min read


Africa–Asia: Growth Dynamics and Geoeconomic Recomposition
For several decades, the global development imaginary has been consolidated into a rigid dichotomy: Asia as the engine of world growth and Africa as a marginal continent within the international economic system. This narrative, widely reproduced in political, media, and academic discourse, fails to capture the complexity and heterogeneity of African trajectories.
CERES
Feb 268 min read


From Revolution to Vacuum: The Death of Saif al-Islam Gaddafi and the End of an Era in Libya
The death of Saif al-Islam Gaddafi has reignited debate about Libya’s political future and the possible end of the Gaddafi dynasty. For years, he was regarded as his father’s natural successor and the reformist face of the regime, playing a significant role in Libya’s rapprochement with the West (Vandewalle, 2012:12). After the 2011 uprising, the country plunged into a profound institutional crisis, marked by rival governments, armed militias, and territorial fragmentation (W
CERES
Feb 203 min read


Handpicked Victims: Silenced Genocides and the Hypocrisy of the Global Order
In today’s global landscape, human tragedies are often narrated selectively. Lives from “distant” countries are usually left out of media and political focus, as philosopher Judith Butler pointed out when reflecting on the unequal attribution of “grievability” to victims. Only those who fit the dominant framework—“Western,” Christian, or strategically useful lives—are presented as worthy of compassion, while other deaths remain silenced.
CERES
Jul 1, 20253 min read


A Little-Known Story: The Oriental Contribution to Western Development
The Oriental Contribution to Western Development
CERES
Jun 6, 20245 min read


Brazil - Africa: Relations for a Multipolar Future
The new multipolar order, or what is understood as the beginning of multipolarity, has as one of its characteristics new arrangements in...
CERES
Apr 30, 20244 min read
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