This movie is sad and, at times, hard to watch. It is about Tomas Young, a soldier who signed up for the US Army immediately following the terror attacks of September 11, 2001. Only five days into his deployment in Iraq, Young took a shot in the back, leaving him paralyzed from the chest down. […]
Tomorrow marks the opening of Women Deliver 2010, the largest conference on women and maternal health, held June 7-9 in Washington, DC. Speakers will include UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon, Christiane Amanpour, Helene Gayle, and Melinda Gates, among others. The 2007 conference brought together more than 2000 participants from 115 countries, and brought emphasis to the importance of […]
There is a lot of discussion on the issue of ending gender-based violence in recent media and the topic is far from new and far too widespread for many to see quick solutions and changes. However much has been done to raise awareness on gender-based violence and related issues and how they impact girls, women, and their families. […]
After being married for over a year, my wife and I have finally found the time to go on a honeymoon. So I won’t be posting for the next several weeks. This post’s title should let you know where we’re going. Reading material for the long plane ride is, appropriately, The History of the Decline […]
There’s been a lot written about how terrible it would be if the ICC activated its jurisdiction over the crime of aggression. Members of the U.S. Congress, the Heritage Foundation, the Council on Foreign Relations, Richard Goldstone, Harold Koh, and the Wall Street Journal have all come out against it. They’re wrong. Read my piece […]
It hasn’t been a good season for Israel. Even before its ill-advised raid on the Gaza convoy, which could have and might yet cause the Security Council’s agreement on Iran sanctions to come unglued, there was a string of more or less unsavory allegations about the history of its nuclear weapons program. First came the […]
The Danes have a lot to teach us. Samsø is a lab for the rest of the world on how to achieve carbon neutrality. Betsy Kolbert wrote a wonderful piece a couple of years ago: The Island in the Wind. And I’ve written here a few times about “convergence” and how we can have health […]
I’m writing from the Personal Democracy Forum, a big yearly conference on the intersection of politics, governance, technology and activism. Great set of speakers – Eli Pariser of MoveOn, Jimmy Wales of Wikipedia, and even Newt Gingrich. Things got off to an exciting (if technically flawed) start with a conversation between Daniel Ellsberg, leaker of the Pentagon […]
Multilateralism has been a key feature of Barack Obama’s foreign policy vision since he first entered the political arena. The recent National Security Strategy correctly characterizes NATO as “the pre-eminent security alliance in the world today”, and in order to maintain this designation, the Obama Administration states its intention to use NATO’s Strategic Concept Review […]
Karin Grepin, one of the best global health bloggers in my humble opinion, has written a very personal account of the recent birth of her son. Her reflection on her experience deserves a read, in particular the paragraph below: I kept asking myself: what if I lived in a poor country, was a poor woman, and knew […]
Continuing on from my post about data sources a few weeks ago…Pia Christiansen at Covering Health has posted a wealth of links to new and existing initiatives for making community health data as accessible and “as useful as weather data”. Google and Microsoft go head-to-head with applications that fuse maps and data – check out Fusion Tables […]
JERUSALEM—Dozens of international journalists and media workers being held in an Israeli jail were expected to be released by Wednesday evening, local time. Thirty-eight of them were from Greece, Cyprus, Italy, Pakistan, and the U.K. The other 38 were Turkish. Some were identified by the companies they work for and others by their professional associations […]
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