Senior fellow Todd Moss was mentioned in a Financial Times Germany article on Libya.
From the Article
After the death of Qaddafi's way of building a democratic Libya is finally free. About the biggest challenge on this difficult path, however, has not been heard so far: the future handling of the oil revenues.
The oil wealth of the country is often interpreted as a great head start for a democratization of the country. Reaching financial independence and the ability to make significant investments internationally for much optimism. Paradoxically, it might just prove to the oil wealth as the biggest challenge to building a democracy. It must deal with the oil revenue and reformed the political participation beyond elections are possible - this would be a second Libyan revolution.
With Qaddafi abruptly as the common enemy is gone, the very different factions of the rebels were united before. In addition, the Transitional Council has announced plans to hold in a few months, the first democratic elections in the history of the country. Since is connected via the oil wealth with the winning of political power, the power available, the applicant represents an enormous amount at stake here. Combined with the lack of democratic tradition and organized political camps threaten to lure a new political elite to emerge, for which their personal interests rather than the public good standing in the foreground.