Russian Arctic Film Wins Top Prize at London Film Festival
October 28, 2010 1 min. read

“How I Ended This Summer,” a Russian film depicting the isolation of two men who work at a remote meteorological station in the Arctic, has won the award for Best Film at this year’s 54th annual London Film Festival. Jury chair Patricia Clarkson remarked of the director, “Alexei Popogrebsky has combined stunning cinematography with painterly […]

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Study: Arctic Shipping Exacerbating Ice Melting
October 28, 2010 3 min. read

A new study published in the journal of Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics has found that a large increase in Arctic shipping could exacerbate global warming by 17% to 78%. The range is so wide because of the uncertain future of shipping in the High North, which depends on changes in vessel traffic, growth, and shipping […]

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Can the EU handle a multipolar continent?
October 28, 2010 4 min. read

With the Cold War a thing of the past and the limits of US unilateralism clearly demonstrated, the EU must be experiencing perfect conditions for their key competencies; soft power and diplomatic dexterity  – right? European nations have after all been conditioned by the continent’s tumultuous history in the necessity of taking other points of view […]

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Farooque Ahmed's Arrest
October 27, 2010 4 min. read

There we go again. Earlier today, law enforcement authorities arrested yet another terrorist in the making – a naturalized American of Pakistani origin, Farooque Ahmed for trying to help coordinate bombing at Washington’s Metro System, also known as the subway system. Once again, fortunately, this nut’s plot was never a serious threat, but for his […]

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Opposition Members Jailed in Egypt
October 27, 2010 1 min. read

Next month Egypt is to hold its parliamentary elections. In preparation the ruling party has taken to arresting opposition members. The Muslim Brotherhood members were jailed for hanging election posters. Government officials stated that the Brotherhood violated an election law that prescribed religious slogans on posters. As per numerous reports, the ruling party’s posters were […]

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Another Brick in the Wall: The Building of the EAS
October 26, 2010 3 min. read

On November 25, 2010, Lady Ashton, High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and Vice-President of the European Commission, announced in a press release the appointment of the two top administrators of the External Action Service: Pierre Vimont as the Executive Secretary General and David O’Sullivan as its Chief Operating Officer. […]

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Why Target and Talk Might Not Work: Insights from the Theory of Collective Action in Nationalist Politics
October 26, 2010 6 min. read

My colleagues Pat Frost and Rob Grace ( over at the Law and Security Strategy blog) and I have written extensively on why the situation in Afghanistan looks grim.  The war there is a long haul; the Karzai government is corrupt, a two-timing, untrustworthy thing; viable solutions to the conflict in Afghanistan require negotiated international […]

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Negotiations: On, Off, Never Happened, Doomed, Only Hope
October 26, 2010 3 min. read

The story of US/Karzai government negotiations with members of the Taliban have already taken so many twists (mostly rhetorical rather than substantive) that one should not feel ashamed to be confused as to what exactly is going on between the two warring parties. One second the Obama administration admits (Gates) to ongoing negotiations and the […]

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Africa, Poverty, and Pictures
October 26, 2010 4 min. read

Are development charities justified in utilizing dehumanizing images to raise funds for their causes? We’ve all seen it on TV screens,  newspaper ads, and probably heard about it on radio talks. As an African living in America it makes me cringe, just like Duncan McNicholl, every time I see a “photo of a teary-eyed African […]

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World Bank Plan to Spur on Growth in Bangladesh Over the Next 5 Years
October 26, 2010 2 min. read

Over more than a month, I’ve been traveling quite a bit.  In that time, I’ve missed quite a bit of news that has been directly relevant to Bangladesh.  Over the next few weeks or so, I’ll try to readdress all that news and point to holes that might have gone not have gone missing had […]

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Government Sets Up to Ban Religion-Based Politics
October 26, 2010 2 min. read

The Law Minister of Bangladesh, Shafique Ahmed, recently claimed that no special law needs to be passed in order to ban religion-based politics in electioneering.  The recent strike against the 5th amendment by the Supreme Court suffices to end the explicitly religious turn in Bangladeshi politics ushered in Ziaur Rahman, dictator, president and founder of […]

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At It Again: IMF Advising African Nations to Cut Spending.
October 25, 2010 2 min. read

The Voice Of America’s latest Africa News reports the following: the recently released International Monetary Fund (IMF) Regional Economic Outlook suggests that, unless African governments cut spending, they could put their economic growth in jeopardy. According to Antoinette Sayeh, the head of the IMF’s Africa department, although  “smart fiscal planning, combined with government spending, helped […]

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