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#reconstruction

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#eu #israel #palestine : #war / #gaza / #reconstruction / #palestinianauthority / #legitimacy / #corruption

„On Monday, European leaders held their first high-level political talks with the Palestinian government, two months after meeting with Israel. Despite their financial aid, Europe has struggled to influence the political process.“

lemonde.fr/en/international/ar

Le Monde · EU pledges €1.6 billion for the Palestinian AuthorityBy Philippe Jacqué

Today in Labor History April 13, 1873: The Colfax massacre, occurred in Colfax, Louisiana. A mob of former Confederate soldiers and current KKK members murdered 60-153 black militiamen after they surrendered. The militiamen were guarding the parish courthouse in the wake of the contested 1872 election for governor. Southern elections during Reconstruction were regularly marred by violence and fraud. It was the worst act of racist violence during Reconstruction.

New paper, just out.

Often, in real-world situations, one does not know the full structure of a network. However, at the same time, one can often observe some interactions that take place on it, and may be interested in knowing its full structure. For example, one may be detecting some partial criminal activity and may want to determine the whole organization. We consider higher-order networks, which are structures with many-body interactions, and specifically simplicial complexes, and show that one can reconstruct a whole network almost perfectly simply by observing the transient of the dynamics that takes place on it. In fact, we give 3 different algorithms to do it, with different complexities and accuracies, so you can choose which one suits you best.

Today In Labor History March 27, 1866: President of the United States of America Andrew Johnson vetoed the Civil Rights Act of 1866. However, Congress overrode his veto and passed the bill, the first time this had occurred over any major legislation. The bill was the first in the U.S. to define citizenship, and to affirm equal rights under the law for all citizens, including African Americans. Johnson’s rationale for the veto was that the law “discriminated” against whites in favor of blacks.

#egypt #israel #palestine : #gaza / #reconstruction / #arableague

„Unless other regional players, including the Emiratis, Jordanians, Qataris, and Saudis, are willing to carry the reputational, and possibly financial and governmental, burden of an agreement on the administration of Gaza, no plan is workable.“

foreignaffairs.com/egypt/promi

Foreign Affairs · The Promise of the Egyptian Plan for GazaHow Cairo can make peace—and once again lead the Arab world.

Today, for Black History Month, we remember Hiram Rhodes Revels who, on this date, February 25, 1870, was sworn into the U.S. Senate, becoming the first African American ever to sit in Congress. He was a Republican from Mississippi. His cousins were killed participating in John Brown’s raid on Harpers Ferry. During the Civil War, he helped recruit and organize two black Union regiments. When he first arrived at the Senate, southern Democrats refused to let him sit, arguing that the Dred Scott decision, in 1857, ruled that he wasn’t a citizen and had no right to serve, despite the 14th Amendment, ratified in 1868, which gave him birthright citizenship