Articles

The politics of climate change

Simon Latham • Dec 7 2009 • Articles

Efforts to combat climate change will proceed apace regardless of Copenhagen; indeed, the possible shortcomings of the summit should not detract from the task that national governments have already embarked upon and will continue to face over the decades to come. This is because globalisation means that problems are precisely that: global.

Climate “Reparations”

Rodger A Payne • Dec 1 2009 • Articles

One of the critical issues facing Copenhagen negotiators is the amount of money (and technology) that will be transferred from wealthy states to developing countries so that the latter won’t burn fossil fuels and thereby create future emissions that could effectively cancel out any reductions achieved by rich states.

OBAMA ALMOST MAKES THE RIGHT DECISION

Harvey M. Sapolsky • Nov 26 2009 • Articles

A recent report indicated that President Obama had finally made a security policy related decision—not on his Afghanistan strategy which is yet to be announced– but rather on whether or not his administration would seek to have the US sign the treaty banning the production and use of anti-personnel land mines, a treaty that 156 other nations have already signed.

Location, Location, Location: Situating the European External Action Service

Amelia Hadfield • Nov 18 2009 • Articles

Whilst the European media is full of stories about the new President of the European Council and the High Representative of the EU for Foreign Affairs, the third development of an EU Ministry of Foreign Affairs appears to have fallen off the radar, despite fierce turf wars erupting across Brussels as to its proper role.

Brazil

Rodger A Payne • Nov 15 2009 • Articles

Will a new climate agreement require developing countries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions (ghgs)? Will developing states agree to make reductions? In this post, let’s consider the prospects for Brazil agreeing to such reductions.

Interim Deal?

Rodger A Payne • Nov 13 2009 • Articles

The Copenhagen climate summit is now less than one month away and observers are not optimistic that states will agree to a deal cementing either specific greenhouse gas emission reductions or increased environmental assistance to the developing world so they can meet the standards without threatening growth vital to fighting poverty.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the Elephants in the Room

Stephen McGlinchey • Nov 10 2009 • Articles

Cutting through the friendly appearance and conciliatory rhetoric of the Obama administration does not detract from the reality that regarding the Middle East, nothing of substance has changed as the Iranian President asserts.

What Middle East Policy to Expect from the New German Government? When promising ideas threaten to be buried in transatlantic waters

Ali Fathollah-Nejad • Nov 4 2009 • Articles

However big the political odds are, a rational-pragmatic input by the FDP could constructively impact the foreign policy discourse in Europe’s largest country

Afghanistan: Heads You Lose, Tails You Lose

Immanuel Wallerstein • Nov 2 2009 • Articles

The war in Afghanistan is a war in which whatever the United States does now, or that President Obama does now, both the United States and Obama will lose. The country and its president are in a situation of perfect lockjaw.

Hidden costs of the status quo

Rodger A Payne • Nov 1 2009 • Articles

In late October, the United States National Academy of Sciences released an interesting on-line “prepublication” edition of a report called Hidden Costs of Energy: Unpriced Consequences of Energy Production and Use.

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