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John He / June 16, 2010 8:37 pm

Reform Ideology

The intellectual underpinnings of President Obama’s financial regulation reform. With audacity and flourish, Time magazine on February 15th, 1999 dubbed the trio of Robert Rubin, Alan Greenspan, and Lawrence Summers, “The Committee to Save the World.” Today, that cover reads like a joke – instead of saving the world, this trio, more than any other, helped to create the conditions [...]

Giulio Galliani / November 7, 2009 7:44 pm

Conservative Revolutionaries

How the European right wing have become unlikely innovators in the worldwide financial crisis The economic crisis the world is currently experiencing has been the worst since the Great Depression. In such a period, nothing could be easier than pointing out market failures and the inefficiencies of deregulated capitalism. Indeed, it should be the perfect setting for an increase in [...]

Casey Thomson / November 7, 2009 7:43 pm

After Woodstock

Protest music for a new generation The anniversary of Woodstock has come and gone, and with it scores of revitalized folk records and overused tie-dye designs. Many years have passed since the anti-Vietnam movement flooded the streets of America, and time has brought international conflict, economic downturns, and changes in the ideology of our political leaders. The question left in [...]

Max Novendstern / November 7, 2009 7:41 pm

E Pluribus Pluribus

Public discourse in the age of the Internet Republic.com 2.0 by Cass Sunstein Princeton University Press, September 2009, $24.95, 272 pp. Create Your Own Economy by Tyler Cowen Dutton Adult, July 2009, $25.95, 272 pp. Cass Sunstein begins Republic.com 2.0 by asking his readers to imagine a world where their control over the media they consume is total.”It is some [...]

Peter Bacon / November 7, 2009 7:40 pm

Ghosts of Peace Prizes Past

Obama would do well to learn from the post-Oslo experiences of two other Presidents The Nobel Prize Committee’s recent decision to award the Nobel Peace Prize to President Obama touched off a firestorm across the world. Reactions have ranged from rancor from much from the right wing for the supposed lack of justification, to delight from the American left and [...]

Peyton Miller / September 12, 2009 4:42 am

Securing the Homeland

Tom Ridge on the creation and evolution of the Department of Homeland Security and the future of the Republican Party. Tom Ridge is the first Secretary of Homeland Security. He is a former Representative and Governor of Pennsylvania. He was very visible in the 2008 Presidential Race as an aide to Senator John McCain. Harvard Political Review: Can you describe [...]

Elise Liu / September 12, 2009 4:31 am

Avoiding the Politics of Aid

Nicolas De Torrente on how humanitarian aid organizations can be more effective and helpful in a world of global politics. Dr. De Torrente is the former Executive Director of Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders. He is currently a board member for the Drugs for Neglected Disease Initiative. Harvard Political Review: You have written in the Harvard International Review about the [...]

Sarah Johnson / September 12, 2009 4:26 am

Support for Soldiers

Eric Greitens on rebuilding after Katrina and helping veterans continue to serve at home Greitens is the volunteer Chairman and CEO of The Mission Continues and a U.S. Navy SEAL Officer. He recently wrote a book about his humanitarian work abroad called Strength and Compassion. HPR: You have worked in many different sectors from military to education. In your work [...]

Jonathan Yip / September 12, 2009 4:21 am

Reflections on a Winning Campaign

David Plouffe discusses the 2008 race and campaign reform   David Plouffe was the chief campaign manager for President Obama’s 2008 race. He has consulted the Democratic Party for years and is respected nation-wide as a political strategist. Harvard Political Review: Since the inauguration, the Obama for America campaign has become Organizing for America, but grassroots excitement seems to have [...]

Alex Copulsky / September 12, 2009 4:19 am

Averting Armaggedon: Apposite Approaches

In one strictly limited sense, modern man has become as God; he has acquired the ability to destroy the world. After the invention of the atomic bomb in 1945, the United States and the Soviet Union acquired massive reserves of the devices. While many in both nations would like to decrease the megatonnage they aim at each other, the prospect [...]

Daniel Handlin / September 12, 2009 1:40 am

Shovel-Ready Spaceflight

Obama neglects the best stimulus of all: space exploration In the past few months President Obama has proposed hundreds of billions of dollars in new spending to lift the United States out of the recession. Employing arguably the most talented engineers and scientists and involving the most cutting-edge research, spaceflight is one of the very best ways in which Obama [...]

Catherine Cook / September 12, 2009 1:35 am

Neither Prudishness nor Promiscuity

Real Sex: The Naked Truth about Chastity, by Lauren Winner, Brazos Press, 2006. $14.99.192 pg. Sex is a hot topic and is a reliable standby for talk shows, TV shows, and magazines; but is our culture really having any discussion about sexuality? In Lauren F. Winner’s book, Real Sex: The Naked Truth about Chastity, Winner proposes a sexual revival in [...]

Ashley Fabrizio / September 12, 2009 1:26 am

Education in California During the Budget Crisis: A Silver Lining?

On February 20, 2009, California state legislators ended months of negotiations when they closed a vast $41.6 billion budget gap through fiscal year 2010. Even after factoring in the expected federal stimulus funds, the final agreement called for spending cuts, temporary tax increases, and new borrowing. Public education has been one of the budget crisis’s biggest victims, since state funding [...]

Daniel Barbero / April 5, 2009 4:09 pm

Russia’s Upper Hand

Georgia’s troubles in the aftermath of the Ossetia conflict The South Ossetia conflict last August was a tragic farce that ran its full course in barely a week, inviting paraphrasing Porfirio Diaz’s saying about Mexico; poor Georgia, so far from God and so close to Russia! In days, it re-established Russian superiority in the Caucasus and ignominiously ended the Bush-era [...]

Kenzie Bok / April 5, 2009 4:06 pm

Not in Kansas Any More

New role, new tactics for Kathleen Sebelius In December 1999, Kansas Insurance Commissioner Kathleen Sebelius expressed concern that new privacy rules imposed by the federal department of Health and Human Services would undercut state jurisdiction over health information. Federal bureaucracy, she argued, could not handle enforcement as nimbly as the states. A decade later, Sebelius will have the opportunity to [...]

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