Iran's Human Rights Shadow
October 16, 2009 2 min. read

Months after Iran made headlines for human rights violations following the presidential elections in June, Iran is making headlines again.  Earlier this week Amnesty International condemned the execution of a 21 year old convict who was just 17 when he was accused of murder.  He is the third juvenile offender to be executed in Iran […]

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Using Laughter to Heal the Wounds of War
October 16, 2009 3 min. read

I am a true believer in the old saying that “laughter is the best medicine”, when I am down or just having one of those high stress days I pull a face or just do a crazy dance and the world suddenly seems right again.  Laughter is truly a saving grace in many cases, and […]

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Senator Al Franken's Anti-Rape Amendment Closes Government-Corporate Loophole
October 16, 2009 3 min. read

  In a strange legal loophole, American companies—including those that receive government contracts such as Halliburton—can require their employees to sign contracts waiving their right to bring a civil trial against fellow employees that rape or otherwise sexually assault them. This egregious loophole was first spotlighted when Jamie Leigh Jones, a former contractor for one-time […]

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Leadership in a Shrinking World
October 16, 2009 1 min. read

How will the world become more unified in the next ten years? The Stanley Foundation edited a book to investigate the “paths by which nine powerful nations, a regional union of 27 states, and a multinational corporation could all emerge as constructive stakeholders in a strengthened rules-based international order.” This Monday, the New America Foundation […]

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The Voice of Europe
October 16, 2009 2 min. read

Who do you call when you need to reach Europe? Merkel? Sarkozy? Brown? Barroso? There is no one leader of Europe. Instead of a single voice, it has 27 competing voices. It’s always been a question, and some argue that it limits Europe’s global reach. If the Lisbon treaty is ratified, there could soon be […]

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Europe Awakes?
October 16, 2009 2 min. read

The cover story of this week’s Economist argues that “it is time for the world’s biggest economy to rise from its slumber and play a global role.” Although the Lisbon treaty – and its likely ratification – does not signal an obvious emergence of a European superpower, it provokes the questions, “Will Europe wake up […]

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Militant Hubris
October 15, 2009 2 min. read
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For the last eight years, Pakistan has been playing a double-game. Despite considerable US pressure, Pakistan declined to totally give up Al-Qaeda and allied Taliban militants, who had been long supported and used by the Pakistani Army and intelligence services as regional proxies against India. As long as the militants stayed out of the business […]

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News from the World Food Prize Symposium
October 15, 2009 1 min. read

Another important meeting taking place during World Food Week is the World Food Prize symposium taking place in Des Moines, Iowa.  With leaders from business and government agencies, the symposium has been discussing how public-private partnerships can increase sustainable production of food. Read more about the proceedings of today’s symposium by reading or watching online.

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Curbing Fugitive Methane
October 15, 2009 1 min. read

There’s a great front-page article at the “NY Times” today about how three trillion cubic feet of methane leak into the air every year, much of it from oil and gas operations, and how some companies are attempting to stem the tide of leaks.  The article says “This amount has the warming power of emissions […]

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"Blog Action Day '09: Climate Change"
October 15, 2009 1 min. read

Every day is action day on climate change for this blog, but the good folks at Change.org and The Alliance for Climate Protection are sponsoring an international event today, Blog Action Day, that hopes to unite the blogosphere to discuss, promote and move folks to action to help avert climate catastrophe.  (Clean and renewable energy, sane […]

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Elinor Ostrom and a Nobel Reality Check for the Economics Field
October 15, 2009 3 min. read

The announcement of Elinor Ostrom as a co-winner, along with Berkeley economist Oliver Williamson, of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Economics came both as a surprise and a breath of fresh air. None of the participants of Harvard University’s (informal) annual betting pool for the winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics staked their claim […]

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Cap-and-Trade 101
October 14, 2009 1 min. read

Here’s a very good little video from SmartPlanet.com, a CBS Interactive website. For more, see my posts here on Carbon Markets.

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