Plus, access to critical digital services and infrastructure, and racial diversity among judges.
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Brookings Brief

August 12, 2024

Former Gabonese President Ali Bongo Ondimba casts his vote during the presidential election in Libreville
How African governments can regain the trust of their citizens

 

“If the series of military interventions across the West African region over the past couple of years have a common feature, it is the revelation of an underlying popular frustration with democratic rule.” In a Foresight Africa viewpoint, Ebenezer Obadare explains what African citizens want from their governments.

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More research and commentary

 

The realities of being digitally invisible in the 21st century. It is time to make more appropriate policy and programmatic interventions that embrace the importance of universal access to America’s existing and emerging communications infrastructure, argues Nicol Turner Lee.

 

Can racial diversity among judges affect sentencing outcomes? The overall racial composition of an institution can influence individual public officials’ behavior, and this influence may be more important than any individual’s identity when it comes to reducing disparities in outcomes, says Allison P. Harris.

 

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