International Crisis Group
text only version

RSS Feeds

All

Africa

Central Africa

(Burundi, DR Congo, Rwanda, Uganda)

Horn of Africa

(Chad, Ethiopia/Eritrea, Somalia, Sudan)

Southern Africa

(Angola, South Africa, Zimbabwe)

West Africa

(Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Sahel region)

Asia

Central Asia

(Kazahkstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan)

North East Asia

(North Korea, Taiwan Strait)

South Asia

(Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Kashmir, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka)

South East Asia

(Indonesia, Myanmar/Burma, Philippines, Thailand, Timor-Leste)

Europe

Balkans

(Albania, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Kosovo, Macedonia, Serbia and Montenegro)

Caucasus

(Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia)

Moldova

Latin America/
Caribbean

Colombia/Andes

(Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela)

Haiti

 

Middle East/North Africa

Arab/Israeli Conflict

(Israel, Lebanon, Palestine, Syria)

Egypt/North Africa

(Algeria, Egypt, Mauritania)

Iraq/Iran/Gulf

(Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen)

You can also follow Crisis Group's main RSS feed on Twitter.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is RSS?

RSS allows you to see when Crisis Group and other sites have added new content. You can get the latest reports or headlines in one place and as soon as they are published, without having to visit a site every day.  It is an easy way to stay up-to-date on your topics you are interested in. RSS stands for "Really Simple Syndication". RSS feeds are a special kind of web page, designed to be read by computers rather than people. Not all websites offer RSS feeds, but they are becoming more and more popular.  Many news sites like BBC or CNN provide them.

Crisis Group allows you to select from a variety of different continent or region-specific feeds.  Our feeds include our reports and briefing papers, articles and opinion pieces, speeches and media releases.

How to use RSS feeds?

RSS feeds are read by a program called a news reader or aggregator. There are different types of readers, some which use a browser and can be accessed from any computer, and others that you can download onto your computer and work in a similar way to Outlook.  There are numerous RSS readers available free on the web.  You can find them by doing a simple search.  The Google RSS directory has a comprehensive list of readers.

Once you have chosen a news reader, you can then subscribe to different RSS feeds.  For example, if you are interest in Crisis Group reporting on West Africa, you must simply click on the West Africa link above. Once you clicked the link, you can subscribe to the feed in various ways, including by dragging or cutting and pasting the feed's URL into your news reader.

Can I use Crisis Group's feeds on my website?

You can use Crisis Group’s feeds to display our latest headlines on your own website.  Crisis Group encourages the use of our RSS feeds as part of a site, but we require proper accreditation.  Please be sure to include “Courtesy of Crisis Group, www.crisisgroup.org” when posting the feed.  We would also appreciate if let us know when you have posted a feed on your site.