In The News

Eric Chaney April 25, 2007
More than 80 percent of registered voters in France cast ballots – selecting “young candidates who pledged to change French political habits,” writes Eric Chaney, a former French finance ministry official for “The Wall Street Journal.” Conservative Nicolas Sarkozy and socialist Ségolène Royal will face off in the May run-off election, offering voters a clear choice between “giving more freedom to...
Susan Froetschel April 24, 2007
Pesticides and fertilizers have long contributed to global food security. But some farmers, tempted by high crop yields and profits, overuse the products, allowing excess agrochemicals to infiltrate water supplies and soil. The US Food and Drug Administration confirmed deaths of 16 pets and received more than 15,000 complaints of ill pets, linked to gluten imported from China. The reports...
Gwynne Dyer April 24, 2007
Once a nation test fires a missile, all cities and countries within the weapon’s reach can’t help but take pause to mull all possible messages, intentions and relationships. India successfully tested a missile that could reach the Middle East or China’s major cities of Beijing and Shanghai, a capability that could insert more tension into Asian affairs. Journalist Gwynne Dyer speculates that...
Gordon H. Hanson April 23, 2007
Even as US politicians and consumers decry any illegalities associated with immigration, the US economy is hooked on the conveniences that accompany cheap labor. For unskilled workers, illegal immigration is easier and provides more immediate awards than legal immigration, argues Gordon Hanson of the Center on Pacific Economies. Rigid guest-worker policies combined with strict enforcement drive...
Barbara McMahon April 23, 2007
Australia and the US have agreed to a program for exchanging each other’s asylum seekers, with the hopes that geographic distance will discourage dangerous voyages and illegal immigration. The US will handle Australia’s asylum seekers from places like Sri Lanka and Burma; Australia will handle the US detainees from Haiti and Cuba. Though the program, the US and Australia will process and resettle...
Terence Chong April 20, 2007
Nation states should have more power than ever before in history. But global problems, from climate change to poverty, challenge the abilities of nation-states. Groups that despise nation-state control take advantage of any vacuum. Leaders of the nation-state no longer have exclusive control of mass communication, and the internet has shifted more power to anyone who can capture mass attention....
Mira Kamdar April 20, 2007
Buoyant optimism about India’s economic prospects overlooks a critical weakness in the country’s well being. Long accustomed to price supports, India’s farmers confront open markets, government programs that favor large farms, overwhelming debt and changing weather patterns that reduce arable land and water supplies. The story of small farmers, struggling to repay predatory lenders and losing...