In The News

Ernesto Zedillo December 3, 2012
Many in the world point to the need for mechanisms to monitor and control globalization, particularly after a decade when debt crises in one country spread quickly around the globe. Yet as economic interdependence continues to build, governance is not keeping pace. Ernesto Zedillo is director of the Yale Center for the Study of Globalization, and as YaleGlobal Online marks its 10th anniversary,...
Abukar Arman November 29, 2012
The concept of jihad is debated by many and largely misunderstood or misinterpreted by those seeking to drive a wedge between Islam and the West. In setting out guidelines for adherents of the faith, the Prophet Mohammed was intent on transforming society in the 7th century, eliminating ignorance and developing a common code for conduct. Abukar Arman, Somalia special envoy to the United States,...
Rami G. Khouri November 23, 2012
The Islamist-led government of Egypt has brokered a truce to end the fierce fighting and exchange of rocket fire between Gaza and Israel. Israel was poised for a ground invasion, but that’s on hold for now. The events reveal old, failed patterns in the Middle East and a seemingly endless conflict that’s has long instigated regional bitterness, determination and extremism, writes Rami G. Khouri,...
David Shambaugh November 21, 2012
China has installed a new leadership team, but no one should hold his breath waiting for dramatic reforms, suggests China scholar David Shambaugh. China’s leaders understand the challenges of corruption, slowing growth, ethnic discontent, strained relations with neighbor states and trade partners, but may find these difficult to address. Shambaugh lists four constraints for the new generation of...
Strobe Talbott November 19, 2012
This week YaleGlobal Online marks its 10th anniversary and coincidentally it’s also a period of global transition. In Washington and Beijing, new administrations prepare to take the reins. We begin this week with an analysis of the significance of President Barack Obama’s reelection by Strobe Talbott, the first director of the Yale Center for the Study of Globalization, of which YaleGlobal is the...
Stein Tønnesson November 16, 2012
China has long insisted its goal is a peaceful rise, but Asia’s largest economy has ruffled the feathers of close neighbors along the way. Hu Jintao, outgoing president, bears some responsibility, suggests Stein Tønnesson of the East Asian Peace program, University of Uppsala. Assertive language, including territorial claims of small rocks and reefs, and disregard for North Korea’s belligerence...
Jamsheed K. Choksy, Carol E. B. Choksy November 14, 2012
Both the United States and Iran must contend with polarized politics. Yet large majorities of Iranians and Americans do not support Iran’s development of nuclear capability for military purposes and do not want to start a war over the issue. An attack on Iran’s nuclear program, which it insists is for peaceful purposes, is useless because the knowhow is there, as it is in many other places, and...