WEEKLY SERIES

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COMMENTARIES

  • The New French Fashion in Civil Rights

    Ian Buruma Series: Crossing Cultures
    2010-02-08
    The French parliament wants to ban Muslim women from wearing the burqa – the full, face-covering garment worn by some orthodox believers – in public places. But, while no woman should be forced to cover herself up, nor, in a pluralist society, should anyone be forced not to.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 971
  • The Euro’s Final Countdown?

    Sylvester Eijffinger and Edin Mujagic Series: European Economies
    2010-02-08
    cartoon The introduction of the euro in 1999, it was claimed, would narrow the economic differences between the member countries of the monetary union. After the common currency’s first decade, however, increased divergence, rather than rapid convergence, has become the norm within the euro area, and tensions can be expected to increase further.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 1874
  • Chile Stays the Course

    Carlos Gervasoni Series: Latin America
    2010-02-08
    When Sebastián Piñera – the moderately conservative tycoon who was recently elected president – takes office on March 11, Chile will experience what some political scientists consider a watershed in every successful transition to democracy: the rotation of power among political parties. But, in substantive terms, Piñera represents continuity more than he does change.... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 0   Read: 704
  • No Time to Put Climate Science on Ice

    Achim Steiner Series: Earth in the Balance
    2010-02-05
    cartoon The science of climate change has been on the defensive in recent weeks, owing to an error that dramatically overstated the rate at which the Himalayan glaciers could disappear. With some strident voices even dismissing climate change as a hoax on a par with the Y2K computer bug, the time has come for a reality check.... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 1   Read: 1347
  • Muddling Out of Freefall

    Joseph E. Stiglitz Series: Unconventional Economic Wisdom
    2010-02-05
    Barack Obama wanted to bridge the divides among Americans that George W. Bush had opened. But now those divides are wider than ever, and Obama's attempts to please everyone, so evident in the last few weeks, are likely to mollify no one.... read
    Comments: 4   Recommended: 1   Read: 5977
  • The Politics of Cosmic Catastrophe

    Richard Weitz Series: Science and Society
    2010-02-05
    cartoon One weighty decision that the world will need to make in 2010 is whether to support an idea raised by Anatoly Perminov, the head of the Russian space agency Roscosmos, to launch an unmanned mission to redirect a large asteroid that might collide with the earth after 2030. But who decides, and how?... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 1   Read: 1767
  • Turkey to the EU’s Rescue

    Jean-Pierre Lehmann Series: Europe at Home and Abroad
    2010-02-04
    The Copenhagen Climate Change Conference was an unmitigated disaster for the EU, exposing its marginalization on the world stage. But there is one thing that could revive the EU, give it much enhanced global respectability, and make it an “interesting” place, as well as ensure a return to the international limelight: Turkey’s admission as a full member.... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 1   Read: 2373
  • Can Greece Avoid the Lion?

    Kenneth Rogoff Series: The Unbound Economy
    2010-02-03
    cartoon Even as the EU and the IMF lay the groundwork for a giant first-round bailout, debate is swirling about whether Greece can avoid sovereign default. The problem is not only the numbers, but also credibility: thanks to decades of low investment in statistical capacity, no one trusts the Greek government’s figures, and Greece’s default history hardly inspires confidence.... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 0   Read: 7698
  • Why an American Recovery Matters

    Michael Spence Series: The New Wealth of Nations
    2010-02-03
    It is a difficult moment to be optimistic about the future of the world economy. A policy agenda in the US that is overloaded, largely domestically focused, and partially paralyzed will mean a lack of attention to global issues that require cooperation and compromise, including the international dimensions of financial reform. ... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 1   Read: 4378
  • Iran’s Revolutionary Echoes

    Said Amir Arjomand Series: Islam
    2010-02-02
    cartoon Iran’s continued unrest, now extending through the 30th anniversary of the revolution that toppled the Shah, raises the question of whether the Islamic Republic is about to fall. As in 1979, millions of Iranians have taken to the streets, and the divide between Iran’s society and its government is much greater today than it was under the Shah 30 years ago. ... read
    Comments: 1   Recommended: 0   Read: 2256
  • Europe’s Ukrainian Linchpin

    Joschka Fischer Series: The Rebel Realist
    2010-02-02
    Frustrated by immobilism and corruption, Europe has turned away from Ukraine – a stance that could turn out to be a significant mistake. After all, Europe and Russia meet in Ukraine, and its fate will not only be a crucial factor in defining European security, but will also play a substantial role in future European-Russian relations.... read
    Comments: 5   Recommended: 0   Read: 2182
  • Ukrainian Democracy and Its Cynics

    Nina L. Khrushcheva Series: The World in Words
    2010-02-02
    cartoon Because Ukraine's Orange Revolution in 2004 turned out to be a seeming unending series of disappointments, most Western leaders are acting as if it makes no difference whether Prime Minister Yuliya Tymoshenko or her rival, Viktor Yanukovich, wins on February 7. They are wrong: a victory for Yanukovich now may be the last free vote Ukraine sees for a long time.... read
    Comments: 9   Recommended: 1   Read: 3034
  • The Treason of the Magistrates

    Guy Sorman Series: The World in Words
    2010-02-02
    Justice in democratic countries is supposed to be independent, but some prosecutors and investigating magistrates conveniently forget this. Indeed many among them are deeply enmeshed in politics, pursuing agendas – and vendettas – of their own. ... read
    Comments: 2   Recommended: 1   Read: 2455
  • Japan’s Secret Shogun

    Masahiro Matsumura Series: The Asian Century
    2010-02-01
    cartoon With the post-general election honeymoon over, the Japanese public has become increasingly aware that Ichiro Ozawa, Secretary-General of the ruling Democratic Party of Japan, is the puppet-master of Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama’s cabinet. Ozawa's role underscores how much the DPJ has in common with its predecessor in government, the Liberal Democratic Party.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 1984
  • Debating Defense

    Giles Merritt, Robin Niblett and Narcis Serra Series: Europe at Home and Abroad
    2010-02-01
    A dozen international think tanks are organizing a worldwide on-line debate, to be held from February 4-9, in association with NATO, the European Commission, and several governments. Anyone may log on and participate, because without popular engagement, security will remain undefined, and the important reforms that are needed will lack political legitimacy.... read
    Comments: 0   Recommended: 0   Read: 1386