Euro elections 2014: You Tell Us bloggers discuss
Young bloggers from across the EU discuss the euro elections as seen from their countries. See also, Whatever happened to the European elections debate?European elections, European democracy?The...
View ArticleSocial democracy in Norway’s culture wars
An exploration of the various elements of Norwegian culture that have over time fostered a deep-rooted conspiratorial populism, challenging the traditional picture of Norway as a consensual social...
View ArticleArmenia and the EEU: the point of no return for Yerevan
Early last year Armenia entered into accession talks with the Russian-led Customs Union – a precursor to the EEU. But does this path hold the key to greater economic prosperity for Yerevan or is it...
View ArticleMass surveillance: the Dutch state of denial
With tacit support from the European Commission, the Dutch government has carefully evaded addressing concerns over mass state surveillance.Flickr/zanten.net. Some rights reserved.As in many countries,...
View ArticleA prize for the future of Iran: the Mothers of Khavaran and the quest for a...
After more than quarter of a century of struggle to raise awareness about the secret execution of their loved ones, Mothers of Khavaran, a grassroots network of thousands of survivors in Iran, receive...
View ArticleCritical perspectives on crisis and migration
Refined narratives on crisis and migration help to enlighten and clarify perspectives on mobility, all too necessary in a world ridden with conflict. Nonetheless, policy inertia, over-simplification...
View ArticleAlgeria and Nigeria: sharing the deadweight of human mindlessness
Wole Soyinka believed that one of the best ways to comprehend the kind of horror that is happening in Nigeria is to remember the experience of other nations in the region confronted with jihadist...
View ArticleKazakh banking – devaluation, consolidation and bad loans
Kazakh banking is in a state of disarray, as banks assimilate the consequences of a recent 20% devaluation of the tenge. But there is also consolidation taking place, adding to the flux; and those bad...
View ArticleThe SWISH Report (24)
What do events in Syria-Iraq, Egypt, Somalia-Kenya and Nigeria reveal about al-Qaida's condition? The movement has again commissioned advice from its preferred management consultancy, whose unrivalled...
View ArticleThe Great War and Iraq: Britain’s poisonous legacy
The little-known involvement of British imperial forces in creating and controlling the state of Iraq in the wake of the first world war is a key source of the country's later disasters, says Ian...
View Article“… a neglected variable: Females”
As Jill Abramson leaves the New York Times, our Sunday Comics author examines the framing of the story - and some new scientific research into the Y chromosome - in the US mediaWhat a day was Thursday,...
View ArticleRecep Tayyip Erdogan, the Almighty
This may be sheer populism. However, it is also the kind of populism that brings millions to the election rallies cheering with joy. Having taken Turkey out of economic crisis once, the AKP is seen as...
View ArticleModi-fied India's growth-friendly sectarianism
A secular right-wing and a growth-friendly communalism will be the new name for Hindutva's sectarian extremism.Narendra Modi. Flickr/World Economic Forum. Some rights reserved.India has now got itself...
View ArticleAgainst poverty and nuclear weapons. For kindness and an independent Scotland
Independence could liberate Scotland to lead change that benefits all who live in these islands.Molly Harvey under arrest at Faslane Naval Base. Argyll & Bute, Scotland, February 2001For all of our...
View ArticleBarnardo's and G4S, partners in the child detention business
Four years ago the coalition government promised to end child detention for immigration purposes. But they didn't. Instead, the UK's biggest children's charity and security giant G4S created a prettier...
View ArticleWhy we can’t leave the power to create money in the hands of banks or regulators
We cannot rely on failed regulators to prevent banks from abusing the power to create money, as Ann Pettifor suggests. Flickr/Doug88888If you or I printed our own money at home, we'd find the police...
View ArticleContent creation in the age of the mobile internet
The tradeoff between the capacity to upload and the possibility to download goes to the heart of the battle between active creation and passive consumption. Today it is clear that the digital divide...
View ArticleTurkmenistan – where everything in the garden looks rosy
State controlled media in Turkmenistan paint a pretty picture of life inside this closed country. But it is a picture that most citizens do not recognise, and they are increasingly challenging...
View ArticleAleppo's souq: witness to the modern Syrian state
Aleppo, once Syria's economic heartbeat, bears testimony to the historic diversity and associated vibrancy a crushing war has flattened. Until 2012 Aleppo was the uncontested hub for manufacture and...
View ArticleThe struggle over Chavez's legacy
Over a year after the Venezuelan leader's death, the Chavez narrative is still up for grabs. Hugo Chavez died on 5 March 2013, and two events took place recently in London to mark the first anniversary...
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