The Climate Change – Migration Nexus
December 21, 2009 2 min. read

As the negotiations in Copenhagen reminded us, scientific evidence demonstrates that the process of climatic change is now more concentrated and more threatening. As a result, human displacement due to environmental change remains an increasing concern in the 21st century. Populations are forced to move due to fast-paced events like hurricanes, slower processes like desertification, […]

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Climate Change: Year in Review
December 21, 2009 3 min. read

Overview – There were critical developments, breakthroughs and some setbacks in 2009 in the policy, politics, business, economics, science, and technology of climate change and energy.  There were moments of high drama in Copenhagen and Washington as well as low comedy.  The landmark Waxman-Markey bill passed in the US House of Representatives, the Obama Administration […]

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Of Copenhagen and the Trials of International Consensus
December 21, 2009 4 min. read

The impact of the global financial crisis creates an illusion that there are real prospects for effective co-operation to reach long-term global goals. Despite China’s immaculate hosting of the Olympic Games and its inevitable rise to the global negotiation tables as a key decision-maker, reality forces her to come to terms with her own pressing […]

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Are we closer to an end for Female Genital Mutilation?
December 21, 2009 6 min. read

Female Genital Mutilation (Circumcision) (FGM) is a human rights violation that follows women and girls across the globe. In the last few years news has begun to shed a little more light on the global fight, which in many ways is only in its infancy.  In February 2008 10 UN agencies urge end to female […]

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Copenhagen Should Not Surprise
December 20, 2009 4 min. read

Everyone seems shocked and discouraged by the outcome in Copenhagen. They shouldn’t be. We must control emissions. So why wasn’t there a deal that made everyone happy? Because that’s the nature of multilateral negotiations, with scores of parties with scores of interests. They are always, always like this, as anyone who has studied them knows: […]

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"The Copenhagen Accord"
December 19, 2009 2 min. read

This is the document that has taken many years and much blood, sweat, tears and toil from thousands of people to produce.  Yvo de Boer, head of the UNFCCC, described the accord as “politically important.” It provides an “architecture for a response to climate change.” The “LA Times” had this story this morning:  Climate summit ends […]

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Thugs, Drugs & Terrorism: Nothing New Under the (African) Sun
December 19, 2009 8 min. read

The New York Times is reporting that three Malians have been arrested and charged with being part of an operation that smuggles drugs across West and North African routes into Europe.  The money then goes to groups associated with Al Qaida, so the charge goes, and also involves  “the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or […]

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First Cut on the Deal
December 19, 2009 1 min. read

AP had this late tonight.  The deal “…requires industrial countries to list their individual targets and developing countries to list the actions they will take to cut global warming pollution by specific amounts. Obama called that an ‘unprecedented breakthrough.’”  AP further reported “German Chancellor Angela Merkel, a leading proponent of strong action to confront global […]

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OT in Copenhagen
December 18, 2009 2 min. read
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We’re in overtime in Copenhagen.  ABC – that’s Australian Broadcasting Corp. for those Americans who might think otherwise – reports “US President Barack Obama has launched intense after-hours diplomacy with China, hoping to salvage a new world climate pact after warning that an imperfect deal would be better than no pact at all.”  (See this.)  […]

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Holiday Hiatus
December 18, 2009 1 min. read

I’ll be away for the next couple weeks on holiday hiatus. For your special holiday surprise, click….. HERE! See you in 2010.

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The Year in Review
December 18, 2009 2 min. read

The year 2009 in public diplomacy was a year for re-branding America in the world. The first African-American in the White House, who also happened to be the most eloquent U.S. President since John Kennedy, would have made for an auspicious year for the international image of the U.S. in any event. In fact, however, […]

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A European Afghanistan?
December 18, 2009 1 min. read

Former French President Jacques Chirac has been placed under investigation for a potential set of new corruption charges, in addition to those he faced in October connected to abuse of power when he was mayor of Paris. His alleged misuse of public funds and staff for personal or political gain are perhaps no more than […]

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