I'm from Hanoi, Viet Nam.
I'm an author of Dot Chuoi Non (dotchuoinon.com/author/hangbelu/), a blog on Positive thinking, founded by Dr. Tran Dinh Hoanh, an attorney in Washington DC.
I'm a co-founder of Conversations on Vietnam Development - cvdvn.net, a virtual think tank. I am a co-founder of two companies in Viet Nam working on children education services. I advise companies on STEAM education, English language education for children and students in Vietnam.
I'm studying the Buddha's teaching and the teaching of Jesus. I practice mindful living including meditation.
I hold a PhD on Sustainable Energy Systems from University of Lisbon and Aalto University.
I graduated from Hanoi University of Technology on Environmental Engineering. I obtained a Master degree of the same major from Stanford University and Nanyang Technological University.
My English-language blog at: hangbelu.wordpress/.
I play table tennis as a hobby.
Women and children prepare to flee with their belongings near the Central African Republic town of Grimari on May 7, 2014. (Siegfried Modola/Reuters)
How many of today’s problems in the Global South are a direct legacy of colonialism? A recent journal article by Bruce Gilley, “The Case for Colonialism,” kicked up great controversy by arguing that the “orthodoxy” that Western colonialism was universally harmful to colonized peoples and countries is overstated. Colonialism, Gilley writes, was “both objectively beneficial and subjectively legitimate” in many places.
Gilley, a political scientist at Portland State University, studies Chinese politics and recently made waves for resigning his membership in the American Political Science Association over its alleged lack of political diversity. His article in Third World Quarterly, however, ignores many existing studies that answer these questions with better data and more rigorous analysis, and which come to a resounding conclusion of “no.”
Explore how colonialism enriched empires and fundamentally reshaped countries such as India.
A Hindu servant serves tea to a European colonial woman in this undated photograph. Source: George Rinhart/Corbis via Getty ImagesSHARE
In the late seventeenth century, the Mughal Empire controlled almost all of the Indian subcontinent.
European visitors marveled at the empire’s wealth and grandeur. Antonio Monserrate, a Portuguese Jesuit missionary, called its cities “second to none either in Asia or in Europe with regards either to size, population, or wealth.”
For centuries, merchants around the world had traveled to India, eager to trade for coveted silk, spices, and textiles. And in 1700, India’s economy was larger than all of Western Europe’s put together, making up nearly 25 percent of the global economy. By 1973, however, that number had dropped to just 3 percent.
How did this happen?
The full story is long, winding, complex, and contentious. It involves centuries of war, technological innovation, and global trade that sent some economies soaring and brought others crashing down. But central to this story for India—and for so many countries around the world—is the history of colonialism, the practice of controlling another country or area and exploiting its people and resources.
FILE – The Nobel laureates and the royal family of Sweden during the Nobel Prize award ceremony at the Concert Hall in Stockholm, Saturday Dec. 10 2022. The Nobel Foundation has withdrawn its invitation for representatives of Russia, Belarus and Iran to attend this year’s Nobel Prize award ceremonies after the decision to invite them “provoked strong reactions.” Saturday’s U-turn came after several Swedish lawmakers said they would boycott this year’s Nobel Prize award ceremonies. (Pontus Lundahl/TT via AP, File)
Updated 4:44 AM GMT+7, September 3, 2023Share
STOCKHOLM (AP) — The Nobel Foundation on Saturday withdrew its invitation for representatives of Russia, Belarus and Iran to attend this year’s Nobel Prize award ceremonies after the decision announced a day earlier “provoked strong reactions.”
Several Swedish lawmakers said Friday they would boycott this year’s Nobel Prize award ceremonies in the Swedish capital, Stockholm, after the private foundation that administers the prestigious awards changed its position from a year earlier and invited representatives of the three countries to attend, saying it “promotes opportunities to convey the important messages of the Nobel Prize to everyone.”
Some of the lawmakers cited Russia’s war on Ukraine and the crackdown on human rights in Iran as reasons for their boycott. Belarusian opposition figure Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya on Friday called on the Swedish Nobel Foundation and the Norwegian Nobel Committee not to invite representatives of Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko’s “illegitimate regime to any events.”
The Directorate for Standards, Metrology and Quality under the Ministry of Science and Technology has issued International Standardisation Organisation (ISO) standards regarding climate change adaption as a practical action to realise Vietnam’s net zero commitments.
VNA Wednesday, August 23, 2023 09:06 https://link.gov.vn/cxKMN5Hf
Hanoi (VNA) – The Directorate for Standards, Metrology and Quality under the Ministry of Science and Technology has issued International Standardisation Organisation (ISO) standards regarding climate change adaption as a practical action to realise Vietnam’s net zero commitments.
The standards named TCVN ISO 14090:2020 contain principles, requirements and guidelines to instruct organisations and sectors to adapt to climate change. They can be applied to every organisation of all sizes, local, regional, international, and at all types of business, corporation, sector, and natural resource manager.
A journey from Hanoi, the Vietnamese capital, via former capitals Ninh Binh and Hue, to Ho Chi Minh City, its investment capital, reveals much about the country
It’s difficult not to think about trains while in downtown Hanoi, especially at mealtimes.
Long metal caravans shunting through town in plain view of the near-ubiquitous streetside eateries contribute a periodic clappity-clap rhythm to the city’s clamorous soundtrack.
Tracks girdle the historical heart of the Vietnamese capital like the head of a question mark and in doing so, connect two of Hanoi’s most popular sites: the Long Bien Bridge, a colonial structure spanning the Red River that was bombed so many times during the Vietnam war it became a symbol of national resistance, and Ngo 224 Le Duan (better known as Train Street), an alleyway along which trains pass perilously close to houses and makeshift cafes.
However, my travel inspiration comes not from the recurrent glimpses of locomotives, but from an old propaganda poster hanging in a tourist shop opposite the Cathedrale Saint-Joseph de Hanoi.
Buddhist philosophy has long permeated the Khmer ethnic community. In this community, the relationship between ethnicity (Khmer people) and religion (Theravada Buddhism) is closely linked together. The Southern Khmer temple is a cultural center of this ethnic group. This place is associated with cultural activities and folk rituals, and at the same time is a traditional school that teaches the knowledge, human ethics, and handicraft. The pagoda is like a museum about Buddhism and the art of “Phum” and “Soc”, a place for Khmer people to rely on their souls when they live and send their ashes when they die. This study refers to the position and role of Theravada Buddhism for Khmer people. From there, state the current situation and make recommendations to the Vietnam Buddhist Sangha and state management agencies, in order to contribute to preserving and promoting the values of Khmer Theravada Buddhism and strengthening the great national unity bloc.
The plaintiffs, who range in age from 5 to 22, successfully argued that the state’s refusal to consider climate change impacts before supporting fossil fuel development violated their right a clean environment under the Montana state constitution. Their lawsuit was the first to reach trial among several similar cases in the United States and is likely to bolster other actions seeking to use the legal system to force action on curbing emissions.
Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, 29 August 2023 – The fossil fuel price crisis has accelerated the competitiveness of renewable power. Around 86 per cent (187 gigawatts) of all the newly commissioned renewable capacity in 2022 had lower costs than fossil fuel-fired electricity.
Renewable Power Generation Costs in 2022, published by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) today shows that the renewable power added in 2022 reduced the fuel bill of the electricity sector worldwide. New capacity added since 2000 reduced the electricity sector fuel bill in 2022 by at least USD 520 billion. In non-OECD countries, just the saving over the lifetime of new capacity additions in 2022 will reduce costs by up to USD 580 billion.
An armada of poorly regulated, scrapyard-ready tankers is hauling sanctioned oil through the region’s bustling shipping lanes. With that, they’re carrying an ever-present threat of environmental catastrophe
Smoke rises from the oil tanker Pablo after it suffered from multiple explosions on 1 May off the coast of Malaysia. The ship was registered to Gabon and was part of the so-called “ghost fleet” of little-regulated tankers. Photo courtesy of the Malaysian coast guard.
On the morning of 3 May, residents of Batam, Indonesia, the largest city of the country’s Riau Islands, woke up to beaches black with oil.
If Hanoi agrees to a comprehensive strategic partnership with the U.S., it would represent a remarkable breakthrough in bilateral ties. Still, such a partnership would not represent a significant shift in Hanoi’s foreign policy.
United States President Joe Biden recently announced that he would be visiting Vietnam “shortly”, likely on his return trip from the G20 Summit in India on 9-10 September. While the specifics of the trip have not been confirmed, international media have speculated that the visit may result in an upgrade of bilateral relations. Unofficial reports suggest that the two countries, which are currently in a “comprehensive partnership”, may skip the “strategic partnership” level to move directly to the “comprehensive strategic partnership” (CSP) level.
If true, this will represent a remarkable breakthrough in bilateral ties, as the CSP is the highest level of partnership in Vietnam’s diplomatic hierarchy. The country only forms such partnerships with those that it views as of great importance for its security, prosperity, and international standing. So far, Vietnam has only established CSPs with four countries: China, India, Russia and South Korea.
Unofficial figures point to a mental health crisis amid severe restrictions on Afghan women’s lives
Zahra Nader and Zan Times reportersMon 28 Aug 2023 10.00 BST
First, her dreams of becoming a doctor were dashed by the Taliban’s ban on education. Then her family set up a forced marriage to her cousin, a heroin addict. Latifa* felt her future had been snatched away.
“I had two options: to marry an addict and live a life of misery or take my own life,” said the 18-year-old in a phone interview from her home in central Ghor province. “I chose the latter.”
It was not an isolated act of desperation. Since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in the summer of 2021, there has been a disturbing surge in the number of women taking their own lives or attempting to do so, data collected from public hospitals and mental health clinics across a third of Afghanistan’s provinces shows.
1 of 4 | A Japanese tourist smokes cannabis at a Dutch passion shop in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, June 27, 2023. Thailand’s de facto legalization of marijuana last year has brought a wave of tourists from the region intrigued by the lure of the forbidden leaf.(AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
VHO- Có thể nói, hòn Trống Mái nằm ngay ở ví trí trung tâm của di sản thiên nhiên thế giới vịnh Hạ Long, là biểu tưởng du lịch nổi tiếng trong nước và quốc tế của vùng đất này, nhưng lại đang phải đối mặt với nhiều nguy cơ đổ, trượt nếu chính quyền, cơ quan chức năng sở tại không có ngay giải pháp bảo tồn cấp thiết.
Hòn Trống Mái được giới chuyên gia cảnh báo có nguy cơ cao bị gãy, trượt
Cuộc hội thảo góp ý cho Báo cáo tổng kết và các sản phẩm chính của nhiệm vụ khoa học công nghệ “Nghiên cứu đánh giá hiện trạng và các yếu tố ảnh hưởng làm cơ sở đề xuất các giải pháp bảo tồn hòn Trống Mái, vịnh Hạ Long” diễn ra từ hồi cuối tháng 7 vừa qua, tuy nhiên cho đến nay theo tìm hiểu của chúng tôi, các bên liên quan vẫn chưa có những động thái mạnh mẽ cho vấn đề “cấp cứu” biểu tượng có một không hai của di sản vịnh Hạ Long.
Còn nhớ vào cuối năm ngoái, chúng tôi cùng đoàn chuyên gia thuộc nhiều lĩnh vực khác nhau có chuyến tham quan vịnh Hạ Long, và một trong những điểm đến là hòn Trống Mái. Cơ duyên đưa đến địa điểm này không hề xuất phát từ sự tò mò hay chụp ảnh lưu niệm vì biểu tượng này đã nằm lòng trong sự yêu thích của biết bao du khách, mà trong đoàn có một chuyên gia về địa chất mong muốn mọi người có cái nhìn thực địa ở khoảng cách gần nhất có thể để nhận diện rõ hơn về sự ăn mòn đáng sợ đối với “hai chân” của hòn Trống Mái. Bằng con mắt chuyên môn, vị chuyên gia về địa chất đã cảnh báo rằng, với tốc độ xâm thực và bào mòn của sóng, gió và tác động của con người như hiện nay, chẳng bao lâu nữa độ kết cấu “hai chân” của hòn Trống Mái sẽ bị cưa đứt. Tại thời điểm đó có người nói đùa rằng, hòn Trống Mái đang đứng trên hai “que tăm” bởi trông nó rất chênh vênh, chung chiêng nhất là khi những đợt sóng cao ập vào. Vị chuyên gia còn nói thêm, cũng đã nhiều lần lên tiếng cảnh báo qua mối quan hệ công việc nhưng nhìn chung chưa mấy ai tin, hoặc nhận được câu trả lời đại loại như “trông thế thôi, nó còn vững chãi lắm”.
A year and a half into a historic interest-rate upcycle, Southeast Asia’s economic prospects continue to stand out in a world faced with high inflation and soft demand.
HSBC forecasts that the six largest economies in Southeast Asia — Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Vietnam — will grow 4.2% this year and 4.8% next year. This pace would far outstrip the 1.1% expansion expected in the developed world in 2023 or next year’s estimated 0.7%.
This acceleration is all the more remarkable given that inflows of Chinese tourism dollars have not returned to Southeast Asia as anticipated. For example, in Singapore and Thailand — both popular destinations for Chinese holidaymakers — tourist arrivals are running at only about one-third of pre-COVID levels.
A recovery in tourism would certainly be a welcome boon for Southeast Asia. But meanwhile, trade, the transition to net zero and digital transformation are set to power the region’s economic growth for decades to come and ensure that this dynamic region remains a global growth engine.
Southeast Asia has come a long way as a manufacturing dynamo. It now accounts for 8% of global exports and since 2020, has surpassed the European Union as China’s largest trading partner.
The region is benefiting from a restructuring of global supply chains as it sits at the crossroads of two of the world’s largest free trade agreements, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) and the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership.
RCEP in particular, with its tariff reductions and business-friendly rules of origin, is increasing the appeal of Southeast Asia as a manufacturing base, a fact that more companies are recognizing. According to a recent HSBC survey, Asia-Pacific companies plan to base 24.4% of their supply chains in Southeast Asia over the next one to two years, up from 21.4% as of 2020.
Hết năm học năm học 2022-2023, cả nước ghi nhận thiếu tới 118.253 giáo viên, nhưng vẫn còn hơn 74.000 chỉ tiêu biên chế được giao cho các địa phương chưa tuyển dụng được. Vậy giải bài toán vừa thiếu vừa thừa giáo viên này như thế nào?
Việc không tuyển đủ giáo viên giảng dạy ảnh hưởng không nhỏ đối với việc thực hiện chương trình GDPT 2018. nhiều trường thiếu giáo viên dạy môn học chương trình GDPT 2018 như: âm nhạc, mỹ thuật, lịch sử và địa lý, khoa học tự nhiên, giáo dục địa phương, hoạt động trải nghiệm hướng nghiệp nhưng lại thừa giáo viên dạy đơn môn.
Nguyên nhân dẫn đến tình trạng thừa-thiếu giáo viên
Để giải quyết tận gốc vấn đề thừa, thiếu giáo viên cục bộ này, ngành giáo dục cần xác định nguyên nhân chủ quan và khách quan, từ đó mới có giải pháp phù hợp.
Tình trạng thiếu giáo viên chủ yếu là ở vùng miền núi, hải đảo vì điều kiện đời sống khó khăn, công tác xa nhà nhưng chế độ đãi ngộ chưa tương xứng đảm bảo nhu cầu cuộc sống nên nhiều giáo viên nghỉ việc đó là lý do chính.
Một số thầy cô lớn tuổi không theo kịp với sự đổi mới của chương trình, công nghệ, áp lực công việc về hồ sơ sổ sách, vô số phong trào cuộc thi đã chiếm nhiều thời gian giảng dạy của thầy cô nên không ít giáo viên đã xin nghỉ việc.