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Around the globe, new forms of governance are being sought to counter-balance the hyper-empire of global capitalism. Scotland is developing its own resistance, could England follow suit?
The citizens of the Abkhazia region have become used to a life lived in geopolitical limbo. Following the 2008 South Ossetia war, however, a small number of small countries began to recognise Abkhazian independence. A tailor thought of a novel way to mark the development.
A sense of enduring history and more recent experience of bitter conflict inform Iran's nuclear stance. To understand this could be a way to avoid war.
The political elites of Iran and Turkey give the impression that they are keen to adopt a leading role in the transformation processes of the Arab Spring. But how will their messages be received in the region?
Being English is not a question of blood, of purity: it has always been a multi-racial alliance.
To arrest the drift to social engineering, the voice of those subject to the steering should be inside the institutions responsible for social policy. This means more than putting token ‘community leaders’ on boards. It must be a collective democratic voice. At present, we see the opposite.
Regulatory reform of Britain's media is coming: the question is how, and when. This year's annual Oxford event brought the big players together to wrangle over the future of the press.
Friday 27th January
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Quote of the day
“Where everything becomes simple is the most desirable place to be. But the simplicity must contain the memory of how hard it was to achieve”
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This week's editor
The Long Revolution
Read Anthony Barnett's lecture for the Raymond Williams Society and his foreword to the new edition of The Long Revolution:
We live in revolutionary times... but what does this mean? Anthony Barnett
The long and the quick of revolution Anthony Barnett
The Long Revolution Raymond Williams
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Mary Kaldor on Human security
Daniele Archibugi on Cosmopolitan democracy

The strategic significance and territorial claims on the region of Abkhazia have meant its citizens have become used to a life lived in geopolitical limbo. Following the 2008 South Ossetia war, however, a small number of small countries began to recognise Abkhazian independence. A tailor thought of a novel way to mark the development, reports Oliver Bullough.
The economic and political transformations of the 1990s onwards have allowed much of the Russian countryside to die a slow death. Roman Yushkov and Vassily Moseyev ventured out of the city to examine the extent of the dilapidation and deterioration of rural life in their native Perm region.
The award winning Greek film director, Theo Angelopoulos, died yesterday in an accident whilst working on his new film 











