In The News

Colleen Haight August 17, 2011
Europe and the US account for about 88 percent of the world’s coffee consumption, while most beans are grown in developing nations. Some industry representatives try to ensure what’s become known as “fair trade,” by certifying producers who meet specific labor, environmental and production standards. “Retailers explain that neither FLO – the Fairtrade Labelling Organization’s International...
Yuri Mamchur August 5, 2011
Stability throughout the Middle East should matter more to Russia than the United States, argues writer Yuri Mamchur. But while the US cheered democratic aspirations and greater freedoms promised by the Arab Spring, Russia remained mute. “The dearth of official Russian involvement in the Arab Spring demonstrates the country’s fading influence in the world, at least the type of influence needed to...
Richard S. Ehrlich August 3, 2011
China’s size and increasing economic might at times could be intimidating for other nations in Southeast Asia, including Thailand, despite their complex connections since ancient times. “Beijing is simultaneously increasing its military and cultural influence in Thailand, trying to wean Bangkok away from Washington and other foreign governments while expanding China's own reach southward,”...
Nayan Chanda August 2, 2011
Threats to the status quo and fear of change, often helped along by outside forces, is the foundation for extremism. Economic crisis in Europe combined with high levels of immigration suggest that support for protectionist, anti-immigrant, anti-Islamic policies will only strengthen, explains Nayan Chanda, YaleGlobal’s editor, in his regular column for Businessworld. French politicians on the left...
July 27, 2011
The US Food and Drug Administration has approved use of ultraviolet light technology for purifying fruit juice, an alternative to pasteurization for eliminating harmful pathogens, reports the Mail & Guardian. SurePure, a South African company that developed the technology says it offers” greater microbiological efficacy than conventional UV systems and is effective for both clear and turbid...
Rob Gifford July 25, 2011
China is the world’s factory, yet other countries supply most of the designs. Chinese brands aren’t flowing along with the “Made in China” labels on products. “A key problem for Chinese businesses is a comparative lack of legal protection,” explains Rob Gifford for NPR. For China to move toward innovation, with corporate research and development, it must develop intellectual property rights to...
Pierre Haski July 21, 2011
The French have long been critical of globalizing forces that disrupt their nation’s economy or threaten their identity. Calls for démondialisation, or deglobalization, has emerged as a leading issue in the French presidential campaign. Intense opposition to engagement with the world builds among the left and right, along with alarm about the global debt crisis, structural youth unemployment and...