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Published in: HomeCatalonia-Spain: Deadlock
September 11: the world - and Spain - is taken by surprise with the images of over a million people marching down...
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Published in: oDRSchool buses, oil rigs and raspberries: corruption in Ukraine
Rampant corruption among government officials is a given for most Ukrainians. A recent scam involved the purchase of...
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Published in: openEconomyFidite Nemini, trust no one
The big banks seem to have come out of the financial meltdown relatively undamaged, if not stronger than ever. But...
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Published in: oDRA Pyrrhic victory for Abramovich?
The judgment in the Berezovsky vs Abramovich case was a long time coming. Berezovsky lost comprehensively, but...
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Published in: HomeItaly after the summer break: Monti’s last round?
Intensely scrutinised by other euro zone members, in a context of economic turmoil and growing public discontent,...
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Published in: oDRKazakhstan's Democracy Gap
Over its two decades of independence Kazakhstan has made enormous progress. Economic reforms, energy exploitation...
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Published in: 50.50The gender gap and the American presidential election
Will the gender gap that decisively helped Bill Clinton and Barack Obama win the presidency again? Only if women...
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Published in: oDRIs Russia’s protest movement a flash in the pan?
Putin is back in power and the numbers of Russians actively protesting against the regime have dwindled. Six months...
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Published in: oDRBig business under threat in Putin’s Russia?
A new president could be a new start and hope for the future, but Putin’s return to the presidency signals...
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Published in: oDRFootball & politics: the legacy of Euro 2012 in Ukraine
Ahead of the Euro 2012 football championships, media attention on political scandal and excessive profiteering has...
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Published in: oDRRussia's search for an anti-corruption model – from Sweden to Singapore
Just about everyone in Russia - the Kremlin, the opposition and most Russians in the street – agrees that corruption...
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Published in: oDRRussian politics: is Kudrin the cure for Putin’s ‘tandem malaise’?
Are we witnessing the death throes of Russia’s ruling tandem? Since last September, when their (apparently) joint...
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Published in: oDRCrisis planning: which way forward for Putin’s regime?
The elections are over; the protests continue, though in muted form. Russia’s way forward is not solely a matter of...
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Published in: oDRHow Putin can become a moderniser
A majority of Russians – and not all of them opponents of Putin – demand modernisation. Yet the predominance of the...
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Published in: HomeThe socio-economic foundations of Bahrain’s political crisis
A study of income inequality in Bahrain highlights the failure of the Government to extend its aid to those who need it most.
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Published in: oDRFlowers on a dung heap: markets, politicians and the demise of Russian rural life
The economic and political transformations of the 1990s onwards have allowed much of the Russian countryside to die...
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Published in: 50.50Development and religion: ambivalent policy, grounded practice
Development policy seems to swing between a Marmite-style love-it-or-hate-it approach to religion. Yet practice on...
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Published in: oDRIs Ukraine heading East?
On the eve of an EU-Ukraine summit on December 19, Ukraine’s relations with Brussels are deteriorating. EU officials...
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Published in: HomeChinese companies under scrutiny in Zimbabwe
Ten years into the Look East policy, Zimbabwe is showing itself to be a not-so-satisfied customer of Chinese investment.
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Published in: openEconomyThis crisis is no excuse for technocratic government
In the author's prescient May 2010 article there is the central observation that we are seeing a fundamental...