On the Newsstand:Arab

Brian Burton / May 17, 2010 7:26 pm

The Colors of Islam

Muslims in America remain separated by race.

Eli Martin / May 11, 2010 5:49 pm

The Dark Side of American Liberty

Dr. Tristram Riley-Smith

Felix de Rosen / May 11, 2010 5:49 pm

The Business of Governing in Nigeria

Babatunde Raji Fashola

Adan Acevedo / May 11, 2010 5:49 pm

Getting the Word Out

M.C. Andrews

Eli Martin / April 29, 2010 12:39 am

Corruption is Hardly a Third-World Phenomenon

Recent news that BHP Billiton and Hewlett Packard are now under serious investigation for bribery should serve as a reminder that corruption at the highest level is not reserved for developing countries. Although whilte-collar crime in Wall Street has been well-known for a long time and, indeed, bankers and financiers have never had a worse reputation, we tend to reserve ... Read More

Mason Pesek and Tyrell Dixon / April 19, 2010 4:27 pm

Darfur: To Be Continued

Don’t be fooled by Darfur’s disappearance from the front pages

Sam Barr / April 15, 2010 7:36 am

Final Clubs and Gender Relations

In today’s Harvard Crimson, Daniel Herz-Roiphe has written an unusually articulate, well-argued entry in the perennial “Why Final Clubs Are Still Really Bad” essay contest. I’m glad he focused on gender discrimination and inequality, rather than also trying to tackle racial, hetero-normative, and class-based elitism. Those other forms of discrimination are equally important, but I think they’re pretty low-hanging fruit. ... Read More

Jeremy Patashnik / February 25, 2010 10:58 am

Brownie Points for John McCain

I remember the day when John McCain used to be that Republican that we Democrats kind of liked. Then came the 2008 presidential campaign. I can’t exactly fault McCain for steering hard to the right; he was, after all, trying to win the Republican primary and then energize the party’s base in the general election. Still, there are plenty of ... Read More

Felix de Rosen / February 21, 2010 7:24 pm

Welcome to Israel

On December 23rd, 2009, Harvard Law student Hebah M. Ismail’s ’06 landed at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport with the intention of joining Clinical Instructor and Global Advocacy Fellow Ahmad Amara, as well as another fellow student, for research on land disputes between the Israeli government and Bedouin communities in the Negev desert. At airport security, Ismail was interrogated for ... Read More

Alex Sherbany / February 21, 2010 5:37 am

Why Andrew Sullivan is a Hack, Part I

No, I don’t think he’s an anti-semite (see Jonathan Chait on that). But he has been reckless enough with the truth, and obsessed enough with Israel, that much of the recent criticism is spot-on. Take Sullivan’s latest post on CPAC for example. He begins by heralding Ron Paul’s surprise victory in the CPAC straw poll, and ends up with yet another diatribe against Israel and the ”neocon” quest ... Read More

Eli Martin / February 10, 2010 11:30 pm

What Iran and America can(not) do

Last Wednesday, the Director of National Intelligence, Dennis Blair, at last treated Iran’s nuclear program with some of the honesty it deserves: he admitted that it’s up to Iran whether or not it wants to build the bomb. Although on one level this forms the latest round in saga of political posturing between two sides, it is also a surprisingly frank ... Read More

Alex Sherbany / January 17, 2010 7:30 pm

The Question Everyone’s Asking

(Other than “what’s going to happen to Conan?”) Following revelations that the underwear bomber was fitted in Yemen, everyone is (or should be) asking: what is going on over there? The answer turns out to be… quite a bit. So Yemen is finally front and center on the radar for the U.S. counterterrorism effort. Not to pat ourselves on the ... Read More

Robert Long / December 20, 2009 11:02 pm

Yemen on the Brink

How a failing Yemen threatens international security

Victoria Hargis and John He / December 20, 2009 11:00 pm

Brazil on the World Stage

Can Latin America's largest country rise above the hurdles?

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 ... Read More

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