In The News

Sergei Khrushchev October 4, 2007
Sputnik’s launch 50 years ago marks a watershed event in human innovation. The Soviets anticipated success; for them, Sputnik was another marker in their continuous progression past Western technology. However, a little more than a decade later, the Americans became the first to reach the moon. Soviet efforts in the space race, argues Khrushchev, ultimately failed because of jealousy within the...
Jim Yardley October 2, 2007
China teeters on the edge of a water crisis. The country has five times the population of the United States, but less water, with the bulk of that supply in the south. Past policy mistakes, a dense population, climate change and galloping economic growth has shrunk China’s water supply. Agricultural irrigation accounts for most water usage, and pollution taints sources nationwide. The...
Chandrashekhar Dasgupta September 26, 2007
Although climate change has been brought about largely by development in industrialized rich nations, it will impose the most hardship on the poorest countries. In the first article of this two-part series, Ambassador Chandrashekhar Dasgupta of India argues that accelerated social and economic development may offer the only hope for poor nations who have a long way to go in adapting to climate...
Bobbie Johnson September 21, 2007
The introduction of Google Street View – photographic images of street-level landmarks and people – sparked concern from consumers about loss of privacy and abuse of the internet. Internet users around the world are already alarmed by poor security displayed by some internet banking and other online services, so technology companies, including Google, prod international organizations such as the...
Mark Thirlwell September 17, 2007
Even as economists fret about sustaining global economic integration and politicians in the wealthiest nations make opposition to globalization a winning campaign theme, the phenomenon continues to connect the world. Such a dichotomy may not continue for long, warns economist Mark Thirlwell. Growing alarm in the developed nations stems from the emergence of powerful competitors in the developing...
Samuel R. Berger September 13, 2007
Intent on the war in Iraq, the US has reduced its involvement elsewhere in Asia, South America and Africa. Meanwhile, China and Russia have stepped into the vacuum, warn former Clinton administration officials, Samuel Berger and Eric Schwartz, writing for the Boston Globe. China has provided billions for roads, ports and other projects in nations like Laos, Cambodia and the Philippines, they...
Bjorn Lomborg September 7, 2007
Extreme weather events spur public worries about global warming, and costs associated with such events have increased steadily in recent years. Yet the high costs are linked to increased development in low-lying coastal areas more so than climate change, suggests author Bjorn Lomborg. Governments have developed a “blinkered focus” regarding ways to slow costs associated with extreme storms and...