In The News

Rick Popely April 18, 2006
Delphi Corp., the major supplier of auto parts in the US market, plans to close or sell more than two thirds of its 29 US plants. If the plan is approved by bankruptcy court, the company would focus on high-end electronic technology – with the eight remaining US plants making products that require immediate installation. The sell-off could allow the company to end its union contracts with 17,000...
David Shambaugh April 18, 2006
The US and China are parties to the world’s most important bilateral relationship, and this two-part series analyzes the challenges and opportunities confronting two world powers. In the first article, China scholar David Shambaugh presents a litany of issues that bedevil their relations. From President Bush’s perspective, three points of contention most likely to take center stage: First is...
Frank Biancheri April 18, 2006
Even a world superpower can use a few allies. European nations, long stalwart friends of the US, express alarm that the Bush administration could consider attacking Iran without extensive diplomacy, consultation with allies, and reasoned responses such as revision of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Any attack on Iran would fracture NATO and isolate the US from its traditional allies, argues...
Miriam Jordan April 16, 2006
As US Congress takes a vacation away from debating proposals aimed at cracking down on illegal immigration, immigrants and their supporters remind the rest of the US how much the country depends on their work. Latino workers have walked off their jobs in droves, joining large pro-immigrant demonstrations in more than 100 cities. The protests forced some employers to scramble and close a gap...
Niall Ferguson April 13, 2006
Globalization is in trouble when the US adopts a protectionist stance, argues Niall Ferguson. Extreme proposals, such as building an enormous fence along the US-Mexican border, reveal an isolationist attitude that could extend beyond the immigration issue. Politicians scrutinize the movement of labor, capital and goods in a way that calls to mind what Ferguson labels the “death of globalization”...
Georg Mascolo April 12, 2006
In 2005, the US arrested 1.2 million people attempting to cross the US-Mexico border in Arizona’s Arivaca Valley. About half that number were successful journeying through the treacherous desert, encouraged by words on the Statue of Liberty that welcome immigrants from the world over – “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to be free.” The US estimates that 11 million...
Kevin Rafferty April 12, 2006
Opposition to the US creates both real and imagined threats to national security, yet the biggest threat for the US and the world comes from US policy and its formulators, both Congress and President Bush. After 9/11, the world displayed sympathy for the US, exemplified by the “Le Monde” headline – “We are all Americans.” Yet President Bush squandered cooperation with unilateral actions that...