In The News

Kevin J. Kelley February 24, 2005
In January, international donors quickly met the UN appeal for US$977 million for tsunami relief operations. That same month, member countries gave only US$21 million of the US$29 million requested by the UN World Food Program, resulting in ration cuts for some African nations. This disparity reflects a serious problem: While the international community has quickly responded to the tsunami...
Ven Sreenivasan February 16, 2005
High fuel prices, the avian flu, and Indian Ocean tsunami disasters don't seem to have negatively affected Asia's tourist industry, says a report issued by a major ticketing and distribution company. In fact, "the trials of the past few years had taught the industry to better manage crises." The 40 percent growth rate in Asia's tourism is the fastest of any region in the...
Bjorn Lomborg February 15, 2005
On Wednesday, the Kyoto Protocol on global climate change enters force, marking a milestone for environmentalism. But making climate change "a central moral test of our time" was wrong, writes Bjorn Lomborg, author of The Skeptical Environmentalist. Lomborg points to existing climate models that predict that even universal acceptance of the Kyoto rules would postpone warming by a mere...
Kenneth Rogoff February 11, 2005
In an era of free trade and free markets, some wealthy countries may soon be forced to embrace more centralizing, socialistic policies on healthcare. Aging populations are driving the cost of healthcare upwards. Harvard economist Kenneth Rogoff argues that the growing expense of the health sector will call for the introduction of a bit of socialism in rich liberal democracies. He argues that...
G. Jeffery Macdonald February 8, 2005
Easy access to clean drinking water, along with hygiene system improvements, has been instrumental in enabling those afflicted by poverty to save time and money, as well as helping them avoid infectious diseases. However, some countries – particularly urban regions of South Asia – are falling behind, constrained by budget considerations and political pressures. As a result of difficulties with...
Larry Elliott February 2, 2005
2005 may be the year of Africa, if UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and other officials have anything to do with it. Britain, charged this year with the coinciding presidencies of both the EU and the G8, has vowed to make African economic revival a priority. The poorest continent in the world is steadily growing poorer, as standards of living, health, education, and economic productivity are far...
Thomas Abraham January 28, 2005
Almost as quickly as scientists upgrade vaccinations, communicable viruses are adapting – by genetic mutation – to break through vaccine barriers and transmit faster. Thomas Abraham warns against a "biological tsunami" that is "brewing deep within the microbial world": avian influenza virus, or H5N1. Bird-to-human transmission was once believed impossible, but recently...