In The News

Mark Emmons August 11, 2004
Sporting allegiance can be a telling indication of personal identity, particularly in such a multi-cultural place as the San Francisco Bay, where nearly one in three people was born outside of the United States. Such immigrants often wrestle with multiple identities in deciding whether to root for athletes from their native land, or nationals of their adopted country. In this article, Mark...
Larry Rohter August 11, 2004
Chile’s native Mapuche people have struggled against the government since the arrival of the Spaniards. In those colonial days, the Mapuches were pushed south of Chile’s Bío-Bío river, where they retained formally recognized autonomy. After Chilean independence, however, they were forcibly incorporated into the state and, decades later, pushed onto reservations so as to make room for European...
Seema Sirohi August 10, 2004
Hollywood’s casting of two Asian Americans in lead roles has caught the attention of the non-US press. Writing for Outlook India, Seema Sirohi says that “Harold and Kumar go to White Castle,” which features one Korean American and one Indian American as its protagonists, “makes cinematic history as the first mainstream film with not one but two Asian leads as real as any other twentysomething...
Andres Oppenheimer August 8, 2004
In an upcoming recall election, the Venezuelan public will decide whether current president Hugo Chavez will be allowed to remain in office for the remainder of his term. Preparing for the election, Chavez has placed restrictions on electoral monitoring groups that rank among the strictest in recent Latin American history. The European Union has responded by announcing that it will not dispatch...
Mary Murray August 3, 2004
After Michael Moore’s film, “Fahrenheit 9/11”, played to sold-out crowds in 120 movie theaters across Cuba, the Cuban government decided to play the documentary on state television. Having berated the Bush administration for four years over allegedly waging a war to destabilize the Castro regime, the official Cuban government line parlays well with Michael Moore’s film which portrays the US an...
Joseph S. Nye, Jr. July 29, 2004
One of the heaviest costs of the Iraq War has been the loss of America’s reputation worldwide, writes Harvard professor Joseph S. Nye, Jr. The image of America as an arrogant, global bully is increasingly commonplace around the world. The abuses at Abu Ghraib prison have exacerbated this negative perception of the US, and contributed to the decline of America’s 'soft power'. For...
David Von Drehle July 23, 2004
The 9-11 Commission’s final report concludes that officials in the American security apparatus, which was still emerging from Cold War thinking, were guilty of "failures of imagination" in dealing with potential terrorist attacks. The report spreads blame around, citing diplomatic, intelligence, bureaucratic, and military shortcomings and saying that “The institutions charged with...