In The News

Don Pathan April 17, 2006
Indonesia is the world’s largest Muslim country and plays a leading role in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. As a result, Indonesians question how Muslims of the Middle East determine international perceptions of Islam and recognize the potential for serving as a guiding force. Indonesia could offer a stabilizing influence in Malay-speaking southern Thailand where 1200 people have...
Alkman Granitsas April 11, 2006
From the Mediterranean to Eastern Europe to the Balkans, the periphery of Europe is booming as countries liberalize their markets and shake off the effects of 50 years of communism. The economic activity has attracted immigrants from impoverished lands – along with the first stirrings of racial intolerance. The immigrant experience of “Old Europe” suggests that three factors lead to society’s...
Geoffrey A. Fowler April 10, 2006
All kinds of international firms look eagerly to booming China as the world’s largest market, particularly its growing urban class. Competition requires not only preparing a product, but also knowing Chinese regulations. China has long taken steps to control what its citizens can buy – and publishers have discovered that the government will limit lifestyle magazines for Chinese shopping lists....
Daniel Gross April 6, 2006
US and European companies continue to accumulate wealth, yet neither the overall economies nor the labor forces have joined the ride. Traditional theory once suggested that climbing corporate profits promote investment, create jobs and increase consumer demand, eventually driving up wages as well. With global markets, companies enjoy far-reaching success, maintaining control over distribution...
Boris Khukov April 5, 2006
As a threat, bird flu elicits different reactions. When a German cat died from the flu, panic spread throughout Europe until scientists explained that a cat spreading the virus to humans was an unlikely scenario. Russians have also been wary about the flu, despite periodic government reassurances, with some conspiracy theorists describing the virus as a “leak from a bioweapons factory” or a...
Rami G. Khouri March 31, 2006
The Arab League summit in Khartoum, poorly attended by Arab leaders, coincided with the revolt of several hundred workers in Dubai – and the two events expose problems in the Arab world. The workers, primarily from South Asia for construction projects, protested poor working and living conditions, low and delayed pay, as well as a general lack of basic rights. The leaders in Khartoum and...
Roger Cohen March 28, 2006
The public demand in Afghanistan for a death sentence on Abdul Rahman, an Afghan man who converted to Christianity 15 years ago, has excited outrage on the part of the West. Germany, in particular, with more than 2000 troops in Afghanistan and a fervent regard for religious choice, has expressed discontent. The US has weighed in as well, upset about the “flouting of universal democratic values.”...