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WHY WARLORDS ROSE IN SUDAN? ''THE RISE OF A FAILED STATE' S PART ONE''
Following Sudan’s independence on January 1, 1956, dictators rose to power, and southerners were marginalized, while cultural and religious differences led to crime and violence among Sudanese people, because most leaders took great pleasure in their traditional beliefs. Leaders abused their legitimate roles and responsibilities to represent the civil population with dignity and trust; politics became a study of influence where the influential manipulated those they influenced and used them to their own advantage; everyone suffered and eventually fled their territories for refuge in neighboring countries such as Kenya, Ethiopia, and Uganda; religion caused Sudan to become a society of quarrels with countless troubles and distress, and religion caused Sudan to become a society of quarrels with countless troubles and distress. But when going back to the story of Sudan and Egypt, understand how the two countries were impoverished into political violence before Sudan become independe...
CHAPTER TWO; PRODUCTIVITY AND INVISIBLE CAPITAL THEORY
Productivity is determined by how frequently invisible capital boosts manpower, and the workforce invested in labor dictates any dramatic change in the level of output per product's market. The input, which is invisible capital, affects production across all aspects, from labor to financial markets. But there is a sense in which it is a crucial factor in an economy, as is often determined by examining how effectively inputs are used in relation to labor. As a result of this constructive justification, you will notice that when the inputs per worker are low, the amount of output decreases automatically. But if the invisible force per worker is high, the amount of output per worker increases instantly. As a result, productivity is evidently a dynamic and effective economic development engine, regardless of the strategy that rules the product markets. I have established both a negative and a positive technique throughout this work to assess if productivity would liberate or torment ...
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