Articles

A Response to the World Development Report 2012

Hannah Butt • Oct 18 2011 • Articles

The report claims to be able to form arguments and reach conclusions which extend beyond the economic realm. Yet, the failure to see gender equality as an “end” as well as a “means”, and the financial language used throughout demonstrate that the authors have been limited by their discipline more than they would like to admit.

The Children of Riots: Society, Violence and the Youth in Greece

Ioannis Tellidis • Oct 17 2011 • Articles

Police brutality is now part of everyday life in Greece. Violence from extreme political circles of all directions is on the rise, and an overall feeling of everyone-against-everyone makes evident the crumbling of Greek society.Thus, the only thing that Greek Police seem to be good at is to provoke indignation.

Comparing Russian and Chinese Aircraft Carrier Ambitions

James Bosbotinis • Oct 16 2011 • Articles

Traditionally perceived as continental powers, Russia and China are increasingly looking to invest significantly in the development of their maritime capabilities, most notably through the development and deployment of aircraft carriers. This reflects an aspiration broader than that of simply enhancing their respective naval strength.

Ill-informed or entrepreneurial? Chinese traders in Serbia

Maja Korac • Oct 16 2011 • Articles

The phenomenon of Chinese migration to Serbia, which is one of their newest migration destinations in Europe, is hardly ever mentioned in migration literature. By developing transnational links and translocal livelihood strategies, Chinese traders are transforming disadvantages of both sending and destination areas into opportunities.

Caspian (Virtual) Energy Geopolitics

Paolo Sorbello • Oct 14 2011 • Articles

A simple sentence could summarize almost a decade of negotiations, both political and economic, over a field that has not brought a single drop of oil to the surface: “No oil, plenty of ink”. The case of Kurmangazy, an oil field which lies about half way between the Russian and the Kazakh coasts, helps us understand the multidisciplinarity and the importance of the role of energy in foreign policy decision-making.

THE FORMULA FOR AMERICAN ISOLATIONISM

Harvey M. Sapolsky • Oct 14 2011 • Articles

I prefer to call it Restraint, but let’s be clear, by whatever label America is pulling back. The oceans are big and protect America from much of the world’s turmoil. Being on American side of them is cheaper than being on the other side and wiser too. America is coming home thanks to the government’s budget deficit.

A Gendered Reading of the Anna Hazare Phenomenon

Bairavee Balasubramaniam • Oct 14 2011 • Articles

When Anna Hazare was detained by the Indian authorities to prevent him from protest-fasting against the government’s version of the Lok Pal Bill, he declared the beginning of India’s “second freedom struggle. His use of satyagraha, fasting-as-protest, and the adornment of the Gandhi cap are materially, discursively and performatively evocative of Gandhi’s freedom struggle.

Where Does Article 38 Stand Today?

Kirthi Jayakumar • Oct 12 2011 • Articles

Although Article 38 has helped define international law as a discipline distinct from politics and international relations, it has fallen short of seeing the process through. As dynamic as society is, law needs to be one step ahead to ensure that there is a means to keep actions and omissions in check.

Between Austerity and Viability: The Search for Future Air Combat Platforms in East Asia

Christopher Whyte • Oct 12 2011 • Articles

Recent years have seen the intensification of political tensions between various states in the Pacific and East Asia. The rise of China as a military and economic power has necessarily triggered concern in the region, causing nations to reexamine their air-power procurement and development plans.

Famine in Somalia: A Man Made Disaster

Tom McKim • Oct 12 2011 • Articles

The Somali people, for decades pawns in a catastrophic game of geopolitics, are paying the ultimate price for a counterterrorism policy that has exacerbated the very threat it sought to quell. Now, when western assistance is truly merited, the gates appear firmly shut.

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