Why did Ethiopian Airlines succeed where others struggled? This report examines the system design, discipline, and long-term strategy behind Africa’s most resilient airline.
On Record: When History Is Acknowledged—but Not Accepted (Part 2)
The U.N. resolution recognizing slavery as the gravest crime against humanity passed with broad support—but key nations resisted its implications. This InnerKwest analysis examines how legal arguments, abstentions, and opposition reveal the limits of acknowledgment within existing global systems.
On Record: When History Is Acknowledged—but Not Accepted (Part 3)
Colonial extraction did not end with slavery—it evolved into modern systems of economic and institutional power. This InnerKwest analysis examines how the Congo and other historical frameworks reveal the continuity of global extraction structures.
On Record: When History Is Acknowledged—but Not Accepted
A five-part InnerKwest series examining the U.N. recognition of slavery, global resistance, systemic continuity, and the economic limits of historical accountability.
On Record: When History Is Acknowledged—but Not Accepted (Part 1)
The United Nations has recognized slavery as the gravest crime against humanity, following a resolution led by Ghana. This InnerKwest analysis examines what that recognition establishes—and the deeper questions it leaves unresolved.
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