« Selected articles, Monday 23rd November

Is Iran pre-revolutionary?

Opinion polls suggest the US has got it wrong

Kremlin spin on the Orange Revolution

This battle over history had unintended consequences

"Death on the Rock." Obfuscation

21 years later and still the official version lives on, argues openDemocracy Chairman and man responsible for the programme

Sri Lanka: what happens next?

International pressure is all the Tamils have

The pro-Israel lobby in Britain: full text

The authors ask for transparency in Britain's policy towards Israel
Monday 23rd November

Alien invasion!

I have just seen this and it seems all the more relevant today. No doubt if they try it again, it will be tasered first!

The E.U. as a surveillance society

The EU is developing a full spectrum dominance system of surveillance combing domestic and military, according to a new report

Rwanda’s human rights failings exposed in Commonwealth bid

Rwanda’s Commonwealth bid meets opposition on human rights grounds. Iran’s opposition resolute in the face of government crackdown. Iraqi government bypasses electoral veto. 21 killed in violence over Philippine elections. Algerian 9/11 suspect proved innocent. All this and more in today's security update.

Why do Americans love Sarah Palin?

Why does America take Palin seriously? The answer lies in gender politics, and in the history of right-wing populism. That populism is at its strongest at a time of social anxiety

Sri Lanka: what happens next?

International pressure may be closing the Tamil internment camps now. But it must be sustained, or the cycle of persecution will resume.

Is Iran pre-revolutionary?

Opinion polls suggest the US has got it wrong

"Death on the Rock": 21 years later and still the official version lives on

Looking back on the shooting of three IRA members by an SAS squad on the streets of Gibraltar

Demarchy – can the people rule?

In a small nation on the Western margin of the British Isles, amidst sheep and rocks and old mines, the world’s first popular movement for demarchy is beginning to test its strength
Sunday 22nd November

The Afghan anvil: breaking the Indo-Pakistani deadlock?

Can India and Pakistan resolve their differences and follow a course of enlightened self-interest in Afghanistan?

The future of England

David Wildgoose's address to the Campaign for an English Parliament

Britain's new internet law

Britain's alarming Digital Economy Bill
Saturday 21st November
Friday 20th November

Kremlin spin on the Orange Revolution

On the fifth anniversary of the Orange Revolution, with presidential elections in Ukraine imminent, Andreas Umland looks back on how the Kremlin has spun the events of 2004, and how that version has played back in Ukraine

Beijing implicated in US cyber espionage report

A report to the US Congress accuses Beijing of increasing online espionage, the Prime Minister of Belgium has been appointed President of the European Council, the Bangladesh Supreme Court has condemned the assassins of the country’s first Prime Minister to death. All this and more, in today’s update.

Can President Medvedev make the earth move?

President Medvedev’s announcement that he is considering reducing the number of time zones in Russia has evoked a sense of déjà vu in Samara. Previous attempts have all failed and Medvedev would do well to think hard before proceeding, warns Vladimir Zvonovsky

Is aid working? Is this the right question to be asking?

“Is it working?” is the question most commonly asked of aid. In response, aid agencies feed the public a diet of overwhelmingly “good news stories” to convince them that it is working. This diverts attention from the central question: how to reduce the major gap between what aid currently does and what it could achieve. How donors provide aid is a major cause of aid’s current ineffectiveness.

Shocking new threat to web freedom

The UK government wants to give itself dangerous new powers to protect copyright
Thursday 19th November

Reopen negotiations or face sanctions, Obama tells North Korea and Iran.

Obama demands cooperation from Iran and North Korea at South Korean summit. Karzai sworn in as president. Peshawar faces further bombing. Yemeni forces claim scalps in battle with Houthi rebels. South African mercenaries training pro-government militia in Guinea. All this and more in today's update.

Liberal peace transitions: a rethink is urgent

A significant shift is required if international statebuilding and peacebuilding projects around the world are to contribute to peace and lead to reconciliation while also engaging with international standards for democracy and human rights.
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