By Helen Yu I can’t help but think about my time in Honduras every time I take a drink of water from my kitchen faucet. Even the tap water here, what
By Katia Gomez In 2007, not only was the pharmaceutical industry proclaimed the 3rd most profitable industry of the United States by Fortune Magazine, surpassed only by oil production and the
By Charles Bae David Najar is currently teaching the Muir Writing course, “Jafar, Mosques and Terrorism: Investigating our Representations of the Middle East,” and working on his PhD in Literature. He
By Apratim Ghosh The state of West Bengal was once the beacon of India’s education system. Famed universities such as Presidency College and celebrated scholars including Nobel Laureate Rabindanarth Tagore could
By Andrew Guichet The De Beers Diamond Cartel is arguably the most successful cartel in history both in terms of profit and longevity. For nearly 130 years, the cartel has
By Kathleen Richter Executive Summary: In spite of the Millennium Development Goals and over fifteen years of foreign aid involvement in Bolivia, the maternal mortality rate (MMR) remains high. Unequal income distribution
Children and Their Use in Armed Conflict in Chattisgarh, India By Advait Praturi Executive Summary “We are inevitably our brother’s keeper… whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly.” Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The purpose
Left: 22 miles to the south of the Tecolote Canyon in San Diego, the population of Tijuana, Mexico grows near 5 percent* a year: far faster than official infrastructure can




