Terry Pratchett’s harrowing and extraordinary documentary Many of the most protracted wars around the world since 1945 have had a seasonal element. The... The UN... David Elstein’s recent article It is no surprise that behind the recent Global... Send us a birthday postcard! We hope you have enjoyed looking at our birthday postcards. Give us your own vision of the future, and help set our agenda:www.opendemocracy.net Latest articles from openDemocracy... More Recent Articles
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Saturday, 18 June 2011
Since the 1990s, post-Soviet elites have used manipulation, corruption and the government machine to maintain their grip on power. But with countries' paths diverging over time and with little opposition to speak of in many cases, Andrew...
Euthanasia: a good thing?, Thomas Ash
Does public prejudice condemn many to unnecessarily prolonged and painful deaths? Thomas Ash considers the philosophical arguments for and against
Afghanistan: mapping the endgame, Paul Rogers
The American narrative of progress against the Taliban faces uncomfortable realities on the ground - and unexpected resistance in Washington.
Saving the NHS: the fight goes on, Wendy Savage
Despite the deluge of coverage in England about the fate if its National Health Service there is a lack of alertness from journalists and opposition MPs about what is actually being proposed, changed or staying the same. Professor Wendy...
The foreign correspondent: James Cameron, 1911-85, David Hayes
A voice of wry observation and quiet authority that made humane sense of distant events to a domestic public helped James Cameron become the most respected international journalist in post-1945 Britain. But is there room for his...
Central Asia: the discourse of danger, Nick Megoran and John Heathershaw
From policy reports and academic studies, to computer games and television mini-series, Central Asia is routinely portrayed as overwhelmingly dangerous. Does it matter that serious analyses dovetail with fictional accounts? John Heathershaw...
The "calm down dear" factor writ large: AIDS, women and the UN, Alice Welbourn
In the words of the African parable, when elephants fight, it’s the grass that suffers. Then what will they have to survive on? Alice Welbourn reports on the plethora of men on the platform in New York....
Don't amend the Human Right Act over the privacy row: a response to David Elstein, Helen Wildbore
Friday essay in response to David Elstein, arguing that the HRA already contains the framework for balancing the right to free expression and the right to respect for private life
Cocaine Unwrapped, Rachel Seifert
Interviewing Latin American leaders and victims of repressive policy, film-maker Rachel Seifert argues that the West should take real responsibility and rethink its failed war on drugs
Met can neither "confirm nor deny" censoring Facebook profiles of "extremist groups", Guy Aitchison
One might consider it "extreme" to force some of the poorest, most desperate people in our society to pay for an economic crisis provoked by the greed of the ultra-rich, but apparently that term is reserved for those who oppose such...
Posted by Britannia Radio at 12:35