More Americans Flock to China to Find Work
August 10, 2009 2 min. read

The New York Times featured an interesting article in today’s paper spotting a trend that more college graduates and corporate professionals are flocking to China in search of greener pasteurs for their careers.

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China: Update on Rio Tinto corruption case
August 10, 2009 3 min. read

Australian mining giant Rio Tinto knows that when it does business with a sovereign government, it is dealing with an entity that writes, executes and adjudicates laws on its territory.  Read about the China-Rio Tinto issue in a previous post.  Every multinational knows, especially those in industries such as mining and energy that operate in funky locales, that the sovereign can […]

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The Three Amigos Summit
August 10, 2009 1 min. read

President Obama is in Mexico today attending what’s been called the “Three Amigos” Summit. The mainstream media is billing this summit as a chance for Obama to meet with his Mexican and Canadian counterparts to discuss trade, migration, swine flu, energy, the environment and joint efforts to counter rising drug violence. For a nice overview […]

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Fearing the Rule of Law, Chinese Government Arrests Prominent Human Rights Lawyer
August 10, 2009 4 min. read

The blogosphere is abuzz with the unsettling news that the Chinese government has arrested Xu Zhiyong, a 36-year-old attorney, thereby dealing another blow to the growing Chinese rule of law movement. In authoritarian countries or nations in transition, lawyers often play a key role in bringing greater democracy through the judicial protections, accountability, and transparency […]

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'Glimmers of Hope’ in the Global Recession..??
August 10, 2009 11 min. read

Though you haven’t started hearing much about it yet in the MSM, there really are ‘gilmmers of hope’ on the economic horizon as President Obama’s aggressive stimulus and economic recovery agenda kicks into gear. Recent economic data is beginning to paint a bright pciture for recovery end of 09, into 2010.

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Decreasing Freedom in Cambodia
August 10, 2009 3 min. read

Cambodia has never been known as a haven for free speech and political dissent, but several recent developments in the country have observers even more concerned about the shrinking space for political expression. Last week, a Cambodian court found an outspoken opposition MP guilty of defamation for filing her own defamation suit against Prime Minister […]

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The never fading scars of abuse
August 10, 2009 2 min. read

Children’s bodies aren’t like automobiles with the assailant’s fingerprints lingering on the wheel. The world of sexual abuse is quintessentially secret. It is the perfect crime. The following quote by, Beatrix Campbell, a British journalist, is from her book, Unofficial Secrets, ch. 2 (1988). In the book’s introduction, Campbell quotes a police source on the […]

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US Needs To Take Its Own Advice on Democracy
August 9, 2009 3 min. read

Last Friday the New York Times ran an editorial offering ideas on how to begin serious reforms in New York State government, particularly the New York State Legislature. Leadership challenges in the state senate paralyzed the operations of government at a difficult time in the state’s economic situation (many of the states in the US are suffering in this downturn […]

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FIXER: The Taking of Ajmal Naqshbandi
August 9, 2009 1 min. read

A film not to miss–FIXER: The Taking of Ajmal Naqshbandi–at the Asia Society in New York on Wednesday, August 12. The film is the story of the relationship between Naqshbandi and one of his clients, American journalist Christian Parenti. It has won critical acclaim, and is a rare inside look at the world of journalists […]

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On Bonuses and Wall Street's 'Tin Ear'
August 9, 2009 4 min. read

In the face of what appears as Wall Street returning to status quo business as usual, a brief discussion of two recent developments in public attitudes about the precipitators of the current global financial crisis indicating that voters want more aggressive government action in regulating the Titans of Wall Street.

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"I Killed People": The Movie "The Reckoning" and the ICC
August 9, 2009 4 min. read

Anyone interested in understanding the history of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and prosecuting war crimes should take a look at the new documentary “The Reckoning.”  This film can currently be viewed on-line here [Warning: contains extremely graphic scenes of violence]. The movie explains the court’s history, its foundations in international criminal law that began […]

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Street children – Making it work
August 9, 2009 3 min. read

Moshi is a small town in Tanzania, about an hour drive south of the International Criminal Tribunal in Arusha. But this post is not about the endearing legacy of a genocide, or the incapacity of a court to bring to justice those responsible. Instead, this post is about hope – or at the very least […]

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