The Beginning of the End of the Global Economic Slowdown: A Possible End to the European Union?
January 3, 2012 4 min. read

Anyone watching the end of the year documentaries on stations like the BBC and other international broadcasters likely feel the sense of slight growth in the United States mixed with slowing growth in places like South America and other regions that have thus far resisted the 2008 economic collapse effectively. With the main focus of […]

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Kyrgyz Jet Crash – a Miracle in Osh
January 1, 2012 5 min. read

It was a rough but lucky landing (both “rough and “lucky” are strong understatements here) when a Soviet-built Tupolev (Tu-134) crash landed in dense fog in the city of Osh in southern Kyrgyzstan. According to The Washington Post 82 passengers and 6 crew members were evacuated, 31 of them were injured and 17 hospitalized. Miraculously everyone on board […]

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Haiti: Resolving Age-old Land Disputes Instrumental to Martelly’s Success
December 31, 2011 6 min. read

Dancing for the cameras, bulldozed behind them “Mayor Wilson Jeudi has just bulldozed the entire camp,” recounted Connie Watson, CBC Radio’s Correspondent in Haiti. “He showed up with the police at 6 o’clock this morning, stormed through with machetes and clubs, slicing all the tents and knocking down their springy supports.” Watson witnessed the early […]

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Japan indicts Chinese fisherman in lastest string of Chinese-Japanese tensions
December 31, 2011 2 min. read

Japanese prosecutors indicted a Chinese fishing boat skipper for fishing illegally in Japanese waters, a local official said Friday. The arrest is the latest in a long series of events surrounding the tense Chinese-Japanese maritime relations. Zhong Jinyin was arrested in Japanese waters Dec. 20, the second arrest in the area in less than two […]

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South Asia in 2011: A Concise Account (III)
December 31, 2011 6 min. read

Part 3 – The Innate Stalemate Also Read – Part 1: Many Barrels of a Gun Part 2: Mood on the Ground Amid a general socio-political churning brought about by rising expectations of people in many South Asian nations, the 17th SAARC Summit in Maldives in November culminated with the ‘Addu Declaration’ (named after Addu […]

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The Bus-Gender Freedom Flap
December 31, 2011 3 min. read

Israel has recently been awash in controversy over nothing new in the country’s history — the intersection of policy, society, and religion. The most recent tussle has centered around whether segregating buses based on gender should be permissible. Some in the ultra orthodox community argue that separate seating spaces for men and women would be […]

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2011: Change, Challenges and Reform in Morocco
December 30, 2011 5 min. read

2011 has been a year filled with change, reform, progress and challenges across the Middle East and North Africa, Morocco included. As we anticipate what 2012 holds for the region, here’s a recap of key moments in 2011 for Morocco: February 20 – Thousands demonstrated across Morocco in solidarity with protesters in Egypt and Tunisia, […]

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Year In Review: Israel
December 30, 2011 6 min. read

The past year in Israel has been anything but boring.  The Palestinians were rejected for full-membership in the United Nations, Israeli Corporal Gilad Schalit was returned alive to Israel, Turkey downgraded its diplomatic relations with the Jewish state, the Israeli population took to the streets for social change, and Israel continued its covert operations against […]

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Turkey: Cold War v2.0
December 30, 2011 6 min. read
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I have recently read an opinion piece by Fehim Tastekin, a Turkish Caucasus expert, who regularly writes for the Turkish daily Radikal. I found the article very important, so I translated it to the attention of FPA Blogs followers: ————————————————————————– http://www.radikal.com.tr/Radikal.aspx?aType=RadikalYazar&ArticleID=1073865&Yazar=FEHIM-TASTEKIN&Date=30.12.2011&CategoryID=100 Amidst its growing engagement in the Middle East and the Arab Spring, as well […]

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South Asia in 2011: A Concise Account (II)
December 30, 2011 5 min. read

Part 2 – Mood on the Ground Also Read: Part 1: Many Barrels of a Gun “There’s this contagion of protest,” Richard Stengel, managing editor of TIME, told NBC television as he discussed the naming of “The protester” as Time magazine’s person of the year, 2011. “These are folks who are changing history already and […]

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UNAM Goes Online
December 30, 2011 3 min. read
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At 101 years old, the National Autonomous University of Mexico is one of Latin America’s premier universities, and one of its largest, with over 300,000 students enrolled. Last month, UNAM started posting its archives and teaching materials on the Internet—for free. See www.unamenlinea.unam.mx. In part, political pressure against the university is motivating the endeavor. UNAM […]

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Another disaster in the Russian Arctic: Dock fire consumes nuclear submarine
December 30, 2011 3 min. read

Just a couple of weeks ago, a Russian oil rig sank off the coast of Sakhalin Island, leaving at least 17 dead and 36 more missing. Only 14 people survived, and the search has been called off to ensure the safety of the rescuers in harsh conditions. Now, in the Arctic shipyard in the village […]

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