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DefendTheTruth
- Senior Member
- Posts: 12907
- Joined: 08 Mar 2014, 16:32
ገባ ገባ፣ ሰዉዬዉ ሆሮ ጉዱሩ ገባ፣ ጨክኖ ገባ
የሸኔ መፈልፈያ ነዉ የተበለ ዞን ነበር፣ ነበር ሆነ ነገሩ እንጂ።
Re: ገባ ገባ፣ ሰዉዬዉ ሆሮ ጉዱሩ ገባ፣ ጨክኖ ገባ
DefendTheTruth:
Interesting to see the country side through this news report. Watching reports and analyses out of city studios, I have uttered to myself a few times: አፈሩ የቪድዮ ካሜራን ኣይሰብርም፣ ወደ ገጠርም ወጣ ብላችሁ ቅረጹ እና ኣሳዩ።
The report also presents a solid idea about federalism within Ethiopia that I have been trying to get across like some others.
A practice of federalism that I observed here in the US when I was in school is how the functioning of States and Universities are very much intertwined.
Universities in a State guide policy making by the State.
Listening to the report and hearing about Dembi Dollo University was a quick reminder about the idea of federalism that I posted on this forum more than ten years ago and revisited just a day or so ago.
The question in my mind as an example is if Qellem becomes its own State and works hand in hand with Dembi Dollo University, choosing its own Administrator and University President, what political questions will it have remained to ask of the federal government of Ethiopia?
This area is only an example that can be replicated throughout Ethiopia considering economic viabilities and geographic feasibilities.
Neighboring States along with their Universities collaborate on a variety of development projects. For example, Dembi Dollo University would collaborate with Gambella University in order to develop the fertile Baro River Basin, Neqemte University with Assosa University on the fertile Dhidhesa River Basin, and Shambo University with Debre Markos University on the fertile Abay River Basin.
The naming of the States as ጎድነ or ቡልቺንሰ also matter. One signifies mere geographic location whereas the other signifies ownership by the State’s residents as well as their responsibilities to govern it.
Interesting to see the country side through this news report. Watching reports and analyses out of city studios, I have uttered to myself a few times: አፈሩ የቪድዮ ካሜራን ኣይሰብርም፣ ወደ ገጠርም ወጣ ብላችሁ ቅረጹ እና ኣሳዩ።
The report also presents a solid idea about federalism within Ethiopia that I have been trying to get across like some others.
A practice of federalism that I observed here in the US when I was in school is how the functioning of States and Universities are very much intertwined.
Universities in a State guide policy making by the State.
Listening to the report and hearing about Dembi Dollo University was a quick reminder about the idea of federalism that I posted on this forum more than ten years ago and revisited just a day or so ago.
The question in my mind as an example is if Qellem becomes its own State and works hand in hand with Dembi Dollo University, choosing its own Administrator and University President, what political questions will it have remained to ask of the federal government of Ethiopia?
This area is only an example that can be replicated throughout Ethiopia considering economic viabilities and geographic feasibilities.
Neighboring States along with their Universities collaborate on a variety of development projects. For example, Dembi Dollo University would collaborate with Gambella University in order to develop the fertile Baro River Basin, Neqemte University with Assosa University on the fertile Dhidhesa River Basin, and Shambo University with Debre Markos University on the fertile Abay River Basin.
The naming of the States as ጎድነ or ቡልቺንሰ also matter. One signifies mere geographic location whereas the other signifies ownership by the State’s residents as well as their responsibilities to govern it.