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Topics in this Issue of
July 1, 2008

 

 

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The Campaign

CAN EMILY'S LIST GET ITS MOJO BACK?  Bara Vaida and Jennifer Skalka, The National Journal, June 28, 2008, n.p. The storied Democratic women's political action committee is looking to rebound from losses in 2006 and Hillary Rodham Clinton's failed White House bid.

MICHIGAN: THE DEPRESSED STATE.  Alexis Simendinger, The National Journal, June 28, 2008, n.p.  The Wolverine State is reeling from a one-two punch on jobs and housing.  This is the second in a series of articles taking a close look at the swing states likely to determine the outcome of this year's presidential election. 

Journalism

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO IRAQ?  Sherry Ricchiardi, American Journalism Review, June/July 2008, pp. 20-27. Americans and the American press have lost interest in the Iraq war, says Ricchiardi; coverage has dropped dramatically, both on television and in print. Iraq has been shoved out of the headlines in part because of the U.S. economic downturn and the contentious presidential primaries. In addition “war fatigue” has set in: the accounts of suicide bombings and brutal sectarian violence are repetitive and hard to translate to U.S audiences. In addition, keeping correspondents on the ground in Baghdad is getting to be too expensive for many news agencies. READ MORE

American Values

IN THE BASEMENT OF THE IVORY TOWER.  Anonymous,  Atlantic Monthly, June 2008, pp. 68-73.  An English professor, who wishes to remain anonymous, explains the travails he suffers teaching adults at a small private college and at a community college. Most of his students have families, and more than one job. And most of them, this professor says, are utterly unprepared for college-level work. He writes, “Sending everyone under the sun to college is a noble initiative ... America, ever-idealistic, seems wary of the vocational-education track.” READ MORE

HOW BIG GOVERNMENT GOT ITS GROOVE BACK.  William Galston, American Prospect,  June 2008, pp. 23-26.  The author, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, notes that the post-World War II social contract in the U.S. is under severe stress. To maintain purchasing power, American households have resorted to record levels of borrowing, driving the savings rate into negative territory for the first time on record and raising personal consumption to an unsustainable 70 percent of GDP. This situation has been a long time in the making, and has come about through a number of factors, such as the burden of retirement savings, health care, child care and education has been transferred from employers to individuals, and the decline of manufacturing. READ MORE

LITTLE LEAGUE, HUGE EFFECT.  Scott Ganz and Kevin Hassett, The American,  May/June 2008, pp. 64-67.  The authors, both with the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), writing in a publication of the AEI, believe that youth sports strengthen the economic, academic and social prospects of Americans. Since almost all of life in a capitalist society involves some form of competition, young athletes learn the formula for success in a market-based system. READ MORE

Asia and the US

IRAN AND THE UNITED STATES: THE NUCLEAR ISSUE Cordesman, Anthony H. Middle East Policy Journal, Spring 2008, pp. 19-29. Any form of dialogue can help prevent misunderstandings and tension, the author says, but a dialogue alone can’t bridge basic fundamental strategic and ideological differences such as those that seem to plague the U.S. and Iran, especially on the nuclear issue. Cordesman says the next president will have to create an opening for any new relationship, but notes a new foreign policy team won’t likely be in place until the summer of 2009. READ MORE

War on Terror

Time to get strategic on terrorism? Seda Gurkan, NATO Review, Spring 2008, online article. Clarity about NATO’s role in the fight against terrorism, its available means and its limits can help clarify NATO’s contribution in relation to those of other international organizations. It is widely recognized within the Alliance that NATO is only part of the answer and today’s multifaceted security challenges can only be faced through a comprehensive approach, sharing the burden and the responsibility, and coordinating the international community’s efforts. However, an ambiguous role and a lack of vision only cause confusion about ‘who is doing what’ and complicate burden sharing within the international community. READ MORE

NATO

Building a New Atlantic Alliance: Restoring America's Partnership With Europe. James P Rubin. Foreign Affairs, July/August 2008. pp. 99-111. Washington has paid a heavy price for alienating its European allies during the Bush years, but the next administration will have the opportunity to build a new Atlantic alliance. By compromising with Europe, the US can confront challenges such as climate change and the ongoing wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. READ MORE

Stabilization and Democratization: Renewing the Transatlantic Alliance. Zachary Selden. Parameters, Winter 2007/2008. Pp. 85-99. NATO member militaries are often said to be in the process of transformation, but perhaps it is time to consider transforming NATO itself into an institution capable of coordinating the range of assets and capabilities required to perform stabilization and democratization missions likely in the coming decades. The European Security Strategy (ESS) and the National Security Strategy of the United States (NSS) both highlight the critical intersection of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction, state failure, and the danger of regional conflict. READ MORE

Death Penalty

The EU Campaign against the Death Penalty. John R Schmidt. Survival, Winter 2007/2008. Pp. 123-140. The EU campaign against the death penalty shows that the US no longer enjoys a monopoly on moralizing in international affairs. The architects of the EU, influenced by the US precedent and anxious to define what the EU was for, fastened on the death penalty as a way to seize the moral high ground. The death-penalty campaign is not simply a target of opportunity but broadly consistent with an emerging EU moral consensus that renounces violence and seeks to resolve conflict through engagement and negotiation. READ MORE

China and the Olympics

THINK AGAIN: THE OLYMPICS. John Hoberman, Foreign Policy, July/August 2008, var. pages."The Olympic Games were founded to bridge cultural divides and promote peace between nations. Instead, they often mask human rights abuses, do little to spur political change, and lend legitimacy to some of the world’s most unsavory governments. Worse, the Beijing Games could still be the most controversial of them all." READ MORE

BEIJING'S OLYMPIC-SIZED CATCH-22. Victor D. Cha, Washington Quarterly, Summer 2008, pp. 105-123. "The Olympic spotlight provides China with an opportunity to enhance its prestige, but also with massive pressures for political change that, if left unaddressed by Beijing, will undercut any benefits." READ MORE

CHINA'S OLYMPIC NIGHTMARE: WHAT THE GAMES MEAN FOR BEIJING'S FUTURE. Elizabeth C. Economy and Adam Segal, Foreign Affairs, July/August 2008, var. pages. "Hosting the Olympics was supposed to be a chance for China's leaders to showcase the country's rapid economic growth and modernization to the rest of the world. Domestically, it provided an opportunity for the Chinese government to demonstrate the Communist Party's competence and affirm the country's status as a major power on equal footing with the West."  READ MORE

Ethnicity, Wars and Nations

COMPARATIVE THEORY AND POLITICAL PRACTICE: DO WE NEED A 'STATE-NATION' MODEL AS WELL AS A 'NATION-STATE' MODEL? Alfred Stepan, Government and Opposition, January 2008, pp. 1-25. "Some polities have strong cultural diversity, some of which is territorially based and politically articulated by significant groups that, in the name of nationalism, and self-determination, advance claims for independence. In this article such polities are defined as 'politically robustly multinational'." READ MORE

CURING THE SOMALIA SYNDROME: ANALOGY, FOREIGN POLICY DECISION MAKING, AND THE RWANDAN GENOCIDE. Darren C. Brunk, Foreign Policy Analysis, July 2008 , pp. 301-320. "If Rwanda had been better understood at the outset of the 1994 genocide, would the world have responded differently? That the international community was afflicted with a 'Somalia Syndrome,' suppressing the appetite for intervention in Rwanda, is not a new claim. What is new, however, is the effort this article makes to unravel the reasons for which two largely unrelated and distinct conflicts-Somalia and Rwanda-were perceived within many critical policy-making quarters around the international community as identical 'African' conflict-types." READ MORE

DEMOCRATIZATION AFTER CIVIL WARS - KEY PROBLEMS AND EXPERIENCES.
Jochen Hippler, Democratization, June 2008, pp.550-569. "Democratization and peace-building in post-civil war situations are closely interlinked. To analyse the difficulties of post-war democratization, and especially democratization as attempted by external and international actors, this article deals with the problem in several stages." READ MORE

INTRAGROUP DIVISIONS IN ETHNIC CONFLICTS: FROM POPULAR GRIEVANCES TO POWER STRUGGLES.
Nina Caspersen, Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, April 2008, pp. 239-265. "Divisions within ethnic groups are, contrary to nationalist claims to homogeneity, found in almost every ethnic conflict. Is such intraethnic rivalry based on differing views of how best to protect collective interests or is it largely over power and spoils? The answer to this question has important implications for our understanding of ethnic conflicts and for their potential resolution. This article analyzes intraethnic rivalry in three cases: among the Serb elites in Croatia and Bosnia and among the Armenian elite in Nagorno Karabakh. It highlights the fluidity of ethnic conflicts but also finds a common trend towards factionalization and away from popular constraints" READ MORE

IS ETHNIC CONFLICT INEVITABLE? PARTING WAYS OVER NATIONALISM AND SEPARATISM. James Habyarimana, Macartan Humphreys, et al, Foreign Affairs, July/August 2008, pp. 138-150. "Critics refute Muller's assumptions about ethnic conflict; Muller responds. Jerry Muller ('Us and Them,' March/April 2008) tells a disconcerting story about the potential for ethnic diversity to generate violent conflict. He argues that ethnic nationalism -- which stems from a deeply felt need for each people to have its own state -- 'will continue to shape the world in the twenty-first century." READ MORE

   
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