Issues / Energy

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  • Architects of Change

    World Beat / Department: Fiesta

    By John Feffer, December 20, 2011

    Want to build a new society for peace, justice, and sustainability? Ask an architect.

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  • Occupy and the Climate Negotiations

    Commentary

    By Tom Athanasiou, November 17, 2011

    The problem here is "governance failure." Or maybe we should just call it "decadence." The United States may at this point be so weakened by rot and ideology that it is unable even to act in its own interests, let alone the interests of its people, let alone the interests of humanity as a whole.

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  • Fukushima Women against Nuclear Power

    Commentary

    By David Slater, November 17, 2011

    The nuclear threat, organizers say, extends beyond Tohoku, even beyond Japan. And indeed, this is the message that has been heard around the world, as the anti-nuke protest and politics were staged with specific reference to Fukushima (sadly, rarely with respect to the wider Tohoku region).

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  • Dismantling Elmina Castle

    Commentary

    By Kwei Quartey, October 20, 2011

    Elmina

    Ghana is the latest focus of oil companies. Can it escape the resource curse?

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  • The Politics of Nuclear Crisis and Renewable Energy in Japan

    Commentary

    By Jeff Kingston, October 3, 2011

    This article examines why, in the midst of an unprecedented cascade of disasters, natural and nuclear, the Kan problem trumped all others.

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  • The New Scramble for Africa

    Column

    By Conn Hallinan, September 14, 2011

    Conn 3

    How did a right-wing thinktank devise U.S. policy toward Africa?

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  • Timor's Oil: Blessing or Curse?

    Commentary

    By Guteriano Neves, August 26, 2011

    timor sea oil

    The case of Timor-Leste proves once again how petroleum dependency turns out to be a curse rather than a blessing.

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  • Israel and the Futility of Attacking Iran: Interview with Abolghasem Bayyenat

    Interview

    By Kourosh Ziabari, July 19, 2011

    What makes Iran's nuclear program controversial is Iran's political identity as a state or who Iran is or what it stands for.

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  • Japan's Decline as a Robotics Superpower: Lessons From Fukushima

    Commentary

    By Sakai Yasuyuki, July 12, 2011

    Robots were a major force in the automation drive that made Japan the most competitive nation in manufacturing in the 1980s. That glory seems to have faded in recent decades, and Japanese robotics are no exception.

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  • Japan's Version of Kool-Aid

    Commentary

    By Alexis Dudden, July 5, 2011

    Lady Gaga

    Lady Gaga recently went to Japan to help out the victims of the earthquake. But did she send out all the right messages?

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