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News and Analysis

European Union Policies and Migration

The European Union response to increasing numbers of desperate migrants attempting to enter its borders has been to tighten security and close its borders. Would a better solution be to analyse the factors that made them move in the first place? By Susan George.

 
Britain's Neo-Liberal State

The global financial crisis exposes anew the flaws of a British polity that resists democratic modernisation, illustrating that the United Kingdom remains 'unfit for purpose'. We now need a new approach to the state that ends the fusion between money and politics, say Anthony Barnett and Gerry Hassan.

 
Assessing the G-20 Declaration

The Group of 20 Declaration following a recent high level summit in Washington missed a crucial opportunity to address the real weaknesses in our economic system: those of debt, executive excess and inherently unfair trade rules, argues Robert Weissman.

 
Social Watch Report 2008: Rights is the Answer

After the failure of mainstream strategies to combat the unprecedented financial crisis, rising food prices, climate change and growing inequities, the abandoned principles of social justice and a rights-based approach to development are an essential component of any solution, says a new report by Social Watch.

 
Getting Real on Climate Change

For twenty years the green climate agenda has embraced orthodoxies rooted in market fundamentalism, resulting in political failure and skyrocketing emissions. It is time to focus solutions on public investment and making clean energy affordable, argues Ted Nordhaus and Michael Schellenberger.

 
The Relevance of E. F. Schumacher in the Twenty First Century

Transitioning to a sustainable and just economic system is the ultimate challenge of the 21st century. As the work of E.F Schumacher argues, history will no doubt judge our generation by how well we acknowledge, embrace and take up this challenge, says John Fullerton.

 
The World Bank, the IFC and the Antecedents of the Financial Crisis

Privatisation and deregulation in the financial sector laid the groundwork for economic turmoil. Far from being confined to the rich world, agencies of the World Bank played a key role in pushing these policies in emerging markets, exposing them to the fallout of the financial crisis, writes Paulo dos Santos.

 
Why The Attacks in India Should Surprise Nobody

Religious fundamentalism fails to fully explain the heinous attacks on several Mumbai hotels. Could emerging linkages between India’s desperate poverty, inequality and increased access to information underlie the motive? By Deena Guzder.

 
Lessons of Zimbabwe

A preoccupation with the personality of Robert Mugabe has resulted in a narrow perspective of Zimbabwe's current problems. Instead, any understanding of the country's ills must start with an important historical legacy: post-colonial land reform. By Mahmood Mamdani.

 
Spotlight: Impact of the Financial Crisis on the Developing World

Financial analysts appear to have overlooked the impact of the financial crisis on developing countries, even though the repercussions could be disastrous for the world’s poor. Two reports reveal how lax financial regulation and accounting secrecy facilitated the crisis and could have serious implications for poor countries.

 
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