January 2010 declared National Slavery and Human Trafficking Prevention Month
January 8, 2010 7 min. read

The fight to combat modern slavery ended one decade on a high note, and entered the next on yet again another high note.  The new administration has given considerable focus to the increasing the fight globally.  Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, continued to raise her voice against human trafficking on December 2, 2009, the International […]

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7 Trends to Watch for This Year
January 8, 2010 2 min. read

All the usual caveats about uncertainty assumed, here are 7 climate and energy trends we’re already seeing, that will pick up speed in to 2010: 1.  We’ll get better at making reasonable distinctions between solutions that are politically, versus scientifically, versus economically possible.  The current debate over whether carbon emissions should be reduced to 450 […]

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Aid, Microfinance & the Stories We Tell
January 7, 2010 2 min. read

Halfway through Dambisa Moyo’s Dead Aid, I find myself with many of the same thoughts that plagued me during my graduate studies – how could so many smart people get this so entirely wrong?  Regardless of whether you agree with the intensity of Moyo’s criticism, you will find your head nodding along at some point.  […]

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Geithner Pushed AIG to Hide $13Bn CDS Deal
January 7, 2010 5 min. read

An arm of the Federal Reserve, then led by now-Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, told bailed-out insurance giant AIG to withhold key details from the public about overpayments that put billions of extra tax dollars in the coffers of major Wall Street firms, most notably Goldman Sachs. The sordid tale unfolds in a series of e-mails between the company and the New York Fed while Geithner was its president.

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Wall Street's Outsized Hubris Parties On
January 7, 2010 3 min. read

On Wall Street the past year was filled with one opportunity after another to fix the myriad fundamental structural deficiencies — revealed all too painfully by the financial crisis — that continue to plague the nation’s economic outlook. But as we enter 2010, not a single one of the “systemic failures” in the financial system has been adequately addressed, let alone resolved. This ongoing failure to act in the face of the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression is especially disappointing since President Barack Obama was elected, in part, on a promise to bring constructive and lasting change to the canyons of Wall Street.

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Hillary Clinton's Speech on Development
January 7, 2010 2 min. read

Today U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton gave a speech on development at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. The full speech is available here. The speech gives an overview of how development should work in coordination with defense and diplomacy and offered some specific insights into the ongoing Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review and […]

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Nature's Way
January 6, 2010 4 min. read

Nature has been designing things better and for a lot longer than people have.  We seem to have a tendency to waste energy and resources in our design.  We also tend to create byproducts in our production processes that can – and usually do – have all sorts of negative impacts, not only for ourselves […]

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Government secrecy and national security
January 6, 2010 2 min. read

Last week President Obama issued an executive order to systematize and accelerate the declassification of national security documents. National security is always the arch nemesis of transparency, the ace in the sleeve of politicians who aren’t quite comfortable with whatever pledges of openness they have made. Obama’s decision is therefore admirable not only for the […]

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Two Guantanamo Things
January 6, 2010 1 min. read

* From Juan Cole – Find out about Andy Worthington’s comprehensive research on Guantanamo detainees. * From Opinio Juris – Find out about the recent D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals decision on some Guantanamo habeas petitions.

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Reading List: 'When China Rules the World'
January 6, 2010 2 min. read

  WHEN CHINA RULES THE WORLD: The End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order By Martin Jacques, Penguin Press (2010). Historians may someday debate whether the financial crisis that began a year ago is most notable for how much damage it did to the United States, or how little […]

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NYT: Divergent Views of US Economy in 2010
January 6, 2010 2 min. read

Leading economist who study the U.S. economy for signs of life sometimes have wildly different views of economic metrics, what they mean and are often sharply divideded along partisan economic perspectives. Nevertheless, there are real signs of growth going into the new year.

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Turtles Can Fly (2005)
January 5, 2010 2 min. read

Because Iranian director Bahman Ghobadi uses non-actor children in this movie, the viewer is given a sense of watching a documentary. The film takes place in Iraqi Kurdistan near the border with Turkey. It is set right before the American invasion in 2003. One of the main characters is called Satellite because he sets up […]

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