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June 06, 2008

"Is the “lone researcher” a myth?

Is the “lone researcher” a myth?

By Maximilian Forte


Elitists, isolated in their ivory towers, serving out life terms in self-imposed exile. It’s a great image, if you are writing a comedic novel, or perhaps aiming to produce a take on Great Expectations applied to an academic setting, or likewise some rendition of One Hundred Years of Solitude. One can indeed think of how many of these great novels were produced in solitary conditions, but note, by individuals with a great deal of “noise” in their heads, a great many voices struggling to be heard, in conversation or argument with one another, the author caught somewhere in between the (not so) fictional, allegedly “imaginary” voices.

Continue reading ""Is the “lone researcher” a myth?" »

April 09, 2008

"The Olympic flame wavers in Europe...

DOSSIER: The Olympic flame wavers in Europe | 08/04/2008

Sunday, April 6th in London and Monday, April 7th in Paris, the Olympic torch relay was disrupted by human rights protesters criticising the Chinese regime. With four months to go before the Olympic Games in Beijing, the European press questions the impact of these protests.

Continue reading ""The Olympic flame wavers in Europe..." »

March 18, 2008

"Summit backs 'fifth freedom' for EU scientists

EU agrees climate plan deadline

EU leaders agree to wrap up talks by the end of the year on an ambitious plan to fight climate change.

News

Most Comprehensive Exhibition To Date of Peter Doig Is On View at Tate Britain Peter Doig, Bomb Island 1991

Continue reading ""Summit backs 'fifth freedom' for EU scientists" »

March 08, 2008

"Energy: Europe needs to make up its mind

Europe's sputtering political engine

We must hope that Nicolas Sarkozy realises sooner rather than later that nurturing the Franco-German axis is in the interests of France, the EU and himself

Energy: Europe needs to make up its mind

With the US, China and Russia all vying for energy resources, EU weakness is compounded by its lack of a single voice, writes Josu Jon Imaz

Continue reading ""Energy: Europe needs to make up its mind" »

February 27, 2008

“Paradigm Shift” Needed in Social Science Doctoral Education

“Paradigm Shift” Needed in Social Science Doctoral Education

By Reflection Cafe

Social Science PhDs – Five+ Years Out is a survey of 3,025 individuals who received their Ph.D.s between 1995 and 1999 in six fields, including political science, to assess the quality of doctoral education in U.S. social science programs.

The survey was conducted by the Center for Innovation and Research in Graduate Education (CIRGE) at the University of Washington. Similar to a report released in January by the Carnegie Initiative on the Doctorate (see related story “Five-Year Study Calls for Change”), the CIRGE study found current doctoral education programs lacking in preparing their students for the 21st-century job market. According to the report:Social science doctoral students need better career preparation and better support for learning to manage careers...........

@ haha.nu in Playboy Towel

Continue reading "“Paradigm Shift” Needed in Social Science Doctoral Education" »

February 15, 2008

danah boyd: boycott locked-down academic journals




Found at: INDIGO: International Indigenous Design Network

The INDIGO: International Indigenous Design Network is a research initiative, which explores the role of indigenous visual culture within contemporary society and looks at its relationship to National identity.

An analysis of topical coverage of Wikipedia

By alex on publication

Just noticed the article Derek & I wrote is up on the Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication site. In case the wording of the abstract makes you wonder: yes, we are both native English speakers :(.

danah boyd's closed journal boycott

By ben vershbow

I meant to blog this earlier but it's still quite relevant, especially in light of other recent activity on the open access front. Last week, Danah Boyd announced that henceforth she would only publish in open access journals and urged others — especially tenured faculty, who are secure in their status and have little to lose — to do the same.

Continue reading "danah boyd: boycott locked-down academic journals" »

February 12, 2008

Three manifestoes in Turkish universities

While I am in the middle of probably the busiest week in Bilgi University, that is course registration week, I hear that another headscarf related statement signed by a group of scholars is issued. There have been two so far. One that supports the ban, the other that supports the AKP+MHP (and supported by DTP) move to lift the ban and here comes the third one whose context is to go beyond the polarization witnessed in the first two ones. This statement cries for both freedom and secularism and although it seems to be against the ban, it does not support the manner AKP and MHP initiated. Fuat Keyman (Koç Üniversitesi) Cengiz Aktar (Bahçeşehir Üniversitesi) started the third statement.

Although I don't like the way he presents the issue, Vistilef is a might be a good source to follow the development of the third statement, here, here and here. I am not sure if the second statement is too pro-AKP as some of the names in the undersigned list are quite secular and intellectual personalities but the second statement was constantly under attack by the secularist mainstream media and labelled as an extreme point, so the third one as a moderate voices comes to rescue. There are also constant happy cries by the secularists that the alliance of AKP and liberal intellectuals are coming apart as many prominent liberals did not sign the second one. This might be true to a large extent but still more observation and analyses necessary...

News

Four Impressionist Paintings Stolen From The Buehrle Foundation Museum in Zurich, Vincent van Gogh, Blossoming Chestnut Branches

 Notariously anti AKP Milliyet portrays "the third view".

December 20, 2007

"Extending the Schengen area...

Sarkozy's new love:)

 

The Story of Lisbon and Treaty Consolidation

By nanne

Last Monday I went to a talk by Jo Leinen in the Humboldt University. Leinen is chairman of the Committee on Constitutional Affairs of the European Parliament. The topic was the Reform Treaty and the future of Europe. In due time, you should be able to find his speech here (it will be in German).

Peripheries and borders in a post-western Europe

By Gerard Delanty

Europe is taking not just a post-national but also a post-western shape. The relation between the inside and the outside is complex and ambivalent; while often exclusionary, the periphery can also be viewed as the site of cosmopolitan forms of negotiation.

 

A man walks his dog alongside the river Nisse next to the Poland, ...

A man walks his dog alongside the river Nisse next to the Poland, Czech Republic and Germany countries' bordering triangle near the Czech town of Hradek Nad Nisou, December 20, 2007. The European Union's border-free zone will be extended to Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Lithuania, Latvia, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia on December 21. People from these nations can travel to the existing 15 states of the "Schengen" border-free zone without having to show their passports.

REUTERS/Petr Josek (CZECH REPUBLIC)

 

Security fear as EU drops borders

Celebrations are beginning to herald the enlargement of the Schengen zone to include nine more EU countries.

DOSSIER: Extending the Schengen area | 20/12/2007

This Friday, border controls will be dropped for the new EU countries that have signed on to the Schengen Agreement. While most eastern Europeans are happy about the new freedom of movement, some Western European countries are filled with misgivings.


Village of Schengen symbolic of union

The village in Luxembourg is a slip of a place, with 560 people and a row of petrol stations selling cheap fuel. But Schengen, a few hundred metres from Germany and France, is a badge of pride to supporters of ever closer union.

Germans warn of illegal migration

Unresolved security problems could mean increased crime and illegal immigration following the enlargement of the European Union's Schengen border-free zone, say police and senior politicians

Continue reading ""Extending the Schengen area..." »

December 13, 2007

"EU leaders sign landmark treaty

 

Leaders of the European Union countries pose for a group photo outside Lisbon's 16th century Jeronimos Monastery after signing the EU's Treaty of Lisbon Thursday, Dec. 13 2007.

(AP Photo/Armando Franca)

EU leaders sign landmark treaty

European Union leaders sign a reform treaty in Lisbon designed to replace the ill-fated EU constitution.

 

DOSSIER: The 27 signed the Treaty of Lisbon | 13/12/2007

European heads of state signed on Thursday, December 13rd, a new Treaty, replacing the Constitution, in Lisbon. Once it is ratified, this text should facilitate decisions in an expanded EU of 27. Its content has elicited several reservations in the European press.

Fundamental Rights Charter proclaimed in Parliament amid protest

The Commission, Parliament and Council presidents on Wednesday (12 December) solemnly proclaimed The Charter of Fundamental Rights in the European assembly in Strasbourg, amid shouts from Eurosceptic MEPs.

Spoof road signs are erected in front of the European Commission headquarters in Brussels December 13, 2007. British campaigners for a referendum on the European Union's reform treaty were left deflated on Thursday when a protest stunt came to grief outside an EU summit.

REUTERS/Thierry Roge (BELGIUM)

To believe in a European utopia before Muslims arrived is delusional
Gary Younge: It is pernicious to regard prejudiced views within migrant communities as exclusive to either them or their cultures

Commission hails EU reform progress, calls for more

Despite much-improved results over the past two years, EU governments will have to focus more on "investing in people" and "unlocking SMEs' business potential" in the next three years if they are to cope with the competitive challenge of globalisation, the Commission has said.

DOSSIER: Gaddafi, France's cumbersome guest | 11/12/2007

On December 10th, the Libyan president Muammar Gaddafi arrived in France for a five-day official visit during which he is due to meet politicians, business executives and intellectuals. His presence is causing great controversy, President Nicolas Sarkozy being accused of giving precedence to lucrative commercial contracts at the expense of human rights.

France's President Nicolas Sarkozy (R) and Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi attend a ceremony for the signature of 10 billion euros of trade contracts between the two countries at the Elysee Palace in Paris, December 10, 2007. (Patrick Hertzog/Pool/Reuters)

 

Gaddafi in Paris

Charles Bremmer writes on Gaddafi's visit in Paris and the controversy surrounding it. Sarkozy is defending the visit by arguing that it is important to encourage Libya, which has changed its ways and forsaken Terrorism.

 

Who's financing companies that abuse human rights?

Apparently everybody. A report released today by the Belgian group Netwerk Vlaanderen takes a look at international banks that provide loans and investment services to companies with less-than-stellar human rights records. The companies receiving this capital are in industries such as mining, defense contracting and oil and gas—no surprises there.

Sarajevo siege commander sentenced

The UN tribunal sentenced a former Bosnian Serb general to 33 years imprisonment for ordering the deadly shelling of Sarajevo and terrorising its civilians during the 1992-1995 Bosnia war

Enlarged EU is coping without treaty, says study

European Union leaders fly to Lisbon on Thursday to sign a treaty that most describe as essential to modernise the bloc's institutions after its enlargement in May...

French seek pragmatic EU

Nicolas Sarkozy's chief political aide stressed in an interview with the FT the French president's determination that the EU should not be a 'machine that just advances on its own' and must allow elected national politicians to exercise more influence over competition, monetary and trade policies

 Ekrem Dumanlı Greece, EU member or not?

 

After Struggle, a New French Mosque Is Born European Muslims, many of whom have spent decades praying in basements and abandoned buildings, find acceptance in new mosques.

 

New Dreams for Europe's Future

Jan Techau , head of the Alfred von Oppenheim Centre for European Studies at the DGAP, says that Europe's role is changing. The dream of a European superstate is redundant. Instead, Europe should be looking beyond its borders.

Continue reading ""EU leaders sign landmark treaty" »

December 06, 2007

"EU reins in Sarkozy 'wise men' plan


EU stalemate on workers' rights

EU ministers fail to agree on whether to give new employment rights to agency workers.

EU reins in Sarkozy 'wise men' plan

A French initiative for a high-level committee to chart the European Union's future has been diluted by other states wary that Paris wants to limit the bloc's enlargement, excluding Turkey

 

Europe and America: Managing the 21st Century's Agenda
DGAP The 41-page report of an international conference held in Germany to explore a wide range of current transatlantic issues

Lessons Learned from European Defence Equipment Programmes ISS-EU This 41-page occasional paper investigates European armaments cooperation

Continue reading ""EU reins in Sarkozy 'wise men' plan" »

November 29, 2007

"Elysée to get tough on rioting youths

Elysée to get tough on rioting youths

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, just back from a visit to China, will chair an emergency security meeting at the Elysée palace to try to end days of rioting in a northern suburb of Paris

 

Second French city hit by unrest

Cars are burned and a library goes up in flames in Toulouse, France, after two nights of riots in Paris.

Paris rioters 'criminals' says PM

The French prime minister calls rioters criminals, after two nights of clashes in the Paris suburbs.

 In French Suburbs, Same Rage, but New Tactics A chilling new factor makes the recent violence in France more menacing: the rioters have taken up hunting shotguns and turned them on the police...

Paris suburb riots called 'a lot worse' than in 2005Two years after an orgy of violence in more than 300 communities, several suburbs of Paris have erupted in violence and destruction, and in ways that some call more menacing and organized than in 2005


Top 10 Bizarre Experiments: @ haha.nu.

 

German TV adverts: stEurotypes

In adverts, stereotypes of countries and nations are often exploited to commercialise certain products – a trip through German television

Europe – a bad brand?

Unfocussed, unattractive, lacking a strategy? French marketing expert Georges Lewi lays all bare in his new book

 

Continue reading ""Elysée to get tough on rioting youths" »

November 26, 2007

"'National angle' continues to dominate EU news reporting

EurActiv survey: 'National angle' continues to dominate EU news reporting

Editors in European capitals are increasingly interested in the EU's role as a global player but still insist on giving a 'national angle' to news reporting in order to give EU affairs a 'human face', EurActiv heard at its annual conference earlier this month.

ØBesides EurActiv, national newspapers, the Financial Times, BBC and EuroNews are the key information sources on EU policies.

  • Journalists see energy (43%), foreign affairs (42%), the environment (39%), climate change (34%) and institutional reform (31%) as their priority policy areas in EU reporting. 
  • 62% of the journalists surveyed believe that their main role is providing analysis and commentary, rather than "raw" information, which comes notably from institutional and online sources. 
  • 57% of journalists said that in order to improve reporting on EU affairs, further training on specific policy knowledge was necessary.

 

OEDB: Open Source - Solution for EU to accelerate research and development: How the Open Source Movement Has Changed Education: 10 Success Stories

 Note EU-Digest:Open Source education is an excellent way for the EU to accelerate the improvement of its resource and development base and educational curriculum methodology. Education should not be privatized , but open to everyone for as little cost as possible. The Open Source system in connection with the Internet seems to present an ideal opportunity."

 

 

 

 

EUROPEAN FILM FESTIVAL ESTORIL (Portugal) presented its first edition on 8-17 November 2007

JURY Miquel Barceló |Stéphane Braunschweig |Don DeLillo |Asia Argento |Ruy Duarte De Carvalho

AWARDS:GOLDEN CARAVELLE (30.000 euros)"TUSSENSTAND", Netherlands, Directed by Mijke de Jong
SILVER CARAVELLE (20.000 euros) "YUMURTA", Turkey, Greece,

Directed by Semih Kaplanoglu

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New world order: super, soft, or herbivorous?, Ivan Krastev Mark Leonard

Continue reading ""'National angle' continues to dominate EU news reporting" »

November 21, 2007

"Sarkozy undeterred amid strikes

Sarkozy undeterred amid strikes

French President Nicolas Sarkozy vows to see through controversial reforms despite crippling industrial action.

 Independent Mardi Noir: France faces 'Black Tuesday' Strikes. Sabotage. Student unrest. Transport, schools and hospitals disrupted. Is this President Nicolas Sarkozy's "Thatcher moment"?

NYRB Who Is Sarkozy? By William Pfaff

'Sabotage' hits French railways as strike continues

Widespread sabotage has damaged France's high-speed rail network and caused huge delays to services already hit by an eight-day transport strike, a senior executive at the SNCF state railways said

France on Strike - What are the Economic and Political Consequences?

Putin attacks NATO 'muscle-flexing' in the East

Watchdog to monitor Russian poll

The OSCE grouping reverses a decision not to send observers to next month's elections in Russia.

The Globalist, a series of articles on globalization, Americanization and Europeanization (and part 2 and part 3); and it's a semiglobalized world: Is the world economy as integrated as most people perceive it to be?

EU 'sexual history' quiz denied

The EU says it does not plan to question women on their sexual history in an effort to improve census statistics.

Continue reading ""Sarkozy undeterred amid strikes" »

November 20, 2007

"Huge new strike paralyses France

Thousands of civil servants demonstrate in Marseille, southern France, Tuesday Nov. 20, 2007, for pay rise. Civil servants, from teachers to postal workers, began a mass walkout across France on Tuesday, the seventh day of a transport strike that has caused havoc on French rails. But the government said it would not cede on planned reforms. (AP Photo/Claude Paris)

Huge new strike paralyses France

Hundreds of thousands of civil servants hold a one-day walkout as France's transport strike enters a second week.

French strikes widen as civil servants walk out

Nationwide strikes hit French schools, train services, post offices and airports as a seven-day long transport strike combined with a walkout by public sector workers...

 

Two Sides of Mr. Sarkozy Nicolas Sarkozy will have to resolve the conflict between his enlightened trans-Atlantic overtures and his narrow protectionist vision for Europe

GDP 'outdated' as indicator of wellbeing

The Commission is working on a new tool to measure the wealth and wellbeing of countries beyond the traditional GDP. The new tool will aim to measure 'true' progress, taking environmental and social indicators into consideration.

'A Freeway To Europe'
Sonia Kolesnikov-Jessop Just a decade ago, tiny Croatia was in ruins. Now this star of the Balkans is on track to join the EU.

What's the matter with Greece?

In response to my post last Friday on Fred Kaplan's anti-Americanism experiment over at Slate, a reader from Greece e-mailed me (all errors of syntax and grammar are original):

Continue reading ""Huge new strike paralyses France" »

November 14, 2007

"EU accounts rejected for 13th consecutive year

Sarkozy decries Europe's 'identity crisis'

President Nicolas Sarkozy of France said Europeans were suffering an 'extremely deep identity crisis' linked to globalisation and excessive commercialisation.

Roma ruling highlights segregation problem in Central Europe

Rome funeral for slain Italy fan

The funeral of an Italian football fan shot dead by a policeman is to be held in the capital, Rome....

Things To Do At Work by Metin:

Officeromance

CNN published an article about 'Things you should never do at workcolor>,' with the usual 'never photocopy your naked ass,' or never kiss your boss on the mouth unless she's wearing lipstick, etc.....

 

EU accounts failed for 13th year

The auditors for the EU refuse to sign off the bloc's financial accounts, citing widespread irregularities.

EU accounts rejected for 13th consecutive year

Auditors have failed to sign off the EU's accounts for the 13th year in a row, criticising most major areas of its expenditure.

Continue reading ""EU accounts rejected for 13th consecutive year" »

November 10, 2007

"Biters bitten"; "EU far-right bloc faces collapse and more from Europe...

Sarkonomics – a user’s guide

by Philip Whyte

President Sarkozy is frequently portrayed in France and elsewhere as an “economic liberal”. This is a mistake. He is undoubtedly an economic reformer prepared to take on the privileges of labour market “insiders”; but he retains a French dirigiste’s belief in an active role for the state in economic development. This manifests itself in several areas, including his support for “national champions”, his mercantilist vision of international trade, and his belief that governments should have greater influence over the European Central Bank (ECB).

Sarkozy must avoid Blair's mistakes

Iraq and Iran show the importance of a strong relationship between Europe and the US. But the lesson for France's president is that shaping this is not a task for one man

This week in Network Europe

 A Chadian military plane transporting European men and women accused of kidnapping 103 African child



France split as Sarkozy woos US

Nicolas Sarkozy is the most pro-US president in generations, but French opinion is divided on what this means, writes Hugh Schofield.

 

 

 

Sarkozy better than Brown? Not so fast.

The Telegraph has a an op-ed on Nicolas Sarkozy's just finished visit to the United States, which does an excellent job of putting the fireworks from Sarkozy's speech to Congress into perspective:...........

Behind the Scenes With Protocol Chief Nancy Brinker:


This is the first in a series of posts by Nancy Brinker, Chief of Protocol. Ambassador Brinker introduces herself and provides a behind the scenes look into the U.S. visit by French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

 

Versailles to al-Qaida: tunnels of history, Patrice de Beer

The two world wars of the 20th century started in Europe. The commemoration of the fallen is marked each year on 11 November - the date of the armistice at the end of the "great war" of 1914-18, in which around 15 million people died. It is possible, eighty-nine years on, to see what dangerous legacies were stored by the political and diplomatic as opposed to the military conclusion of this war.

 

Blogosphere to Europe: No Free Rides on US Blood

American bloggers and their readers react with surprise and sarcasm to European calls for continued US engagement in Iraq. Reactions to the Atlantic Community's survey of European experts also include warnings that involving Syria and Iran will be more difficult than it sounds.

Continue reading ""Biters bitten"; "EU far-right bloc faces collapse and more from Europe..." »

November 08, 2007

"Dialogue 'crucial' to rebuilding trust in EU

Bush and Sarkozy declare Iran aim

The US and French presidents say they will work jointly to convince Iran to give up its nuclear programme.

 

@ haha.nu.

 

Sarkozy's speech to congress

I just watched Sarkozy's speech to the American congress and it can be summarized this way: I love America, I love Americans, I want to love from America, and I wished America would love me because then, I would be able to love it even more. To be serious, it was a good speech, but not one of Sarkozy's best because it was obvious that he was enjoying the moment so much that he didn't want to take any risk and to spoil it. He took the easy way out by talking to Americans about them, about why they are great and about why he will stand beside them. I wish Sarkozy had made a “French speech,” that is that he had spoken to Americans parliamentarians about France, about his traditions, and its own greatness. I wished he had explained that he was convinced that it isn't in the French DNA to be anti-American and of his belief that France is not only condemned to be America's ally, but to be its sister nation.

Gunman rampages at Finnish school

Eight people die and at least 10 are injured in a shooting at a school in southern Finland, officials say.

 

Bruegel has just published another in its blueprint series titled

The Happy Few: The Internationalisation of European Firms - New Facts Based on Firm-level Evidence

This is the first report from the research initiative "European Firms and International Markets (EFIM)", led by Bruegel and CEPR, Centre for Economic Policy Research. Written by Thierry Mayer (CEPR) and Gianmarco I.P. Ottaviano (Bruegel), it is the first systematic, cross-country, firm-level research on the features of European firms that compete in International markets. The report shows that only a handful of firms account for the bulk of aggregate exports and foreign direct investment.

Bruegel Senior Fellow Gianmarco Ottaviano is also a professor at the University of Bologna and a research fellow at CEPR. Thierry Mayer is professor of Economics at University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, a member of the Paris School of Economics and a Research Affiliate in the International Trade programme at CEPR.


Dialogue 'crucial' to rebuilding trust in EU

Continued dialogue with member states is fundamental to achieve a sense of common ownership and rebuild trust in the European project, Meglena Kuneva, EU commissioner for consumer protection, will say today at Fondation EurActiv's annual conference in Parliament.

 

Continue reading ""Dialogue 'crucial' to rebuilding trust in EU" »

October 16, 2007

IHT: EU confident of ending constitution debacle by endorsing alternative this week...

Bush tries to stop pen in hand labeled "Congress" from signing paper headed "Armenian Holocaust."

Source: Al-Watan, Qatar, October 13, 2007 VIA

 

by Hugues Dumont and Sébastien Van Drooghenbroeck:

"The status of Brussels in the hypothesis of confederalism" 

At a time when Belgium has been without a government for several months, Hugues Dumont and Sébastien Van Drooghenbroeck, professors at the Facultés universitaires Saint-Louis and experts in constitutional law, looked into the future of Brussels in the hypothesis of a move towards confederalism. They thus explored various scenarios that could lead from federalism to confederalism, showing that the latter is not a mere continuation of the former and that the path is strewn with heady questions. They then review the statuses that could be envisaged for Brussels in the hypothetical wake of such a move, and call for an interdisciplinary and citizen-based reflection in reaction to their analyses. At a time when everything seems possible, this article places the situation in perspective by offering a well-thought inventory, clearly addressing several questions still in abeyance. It merits becoming a reference document in the public debate on the institutional future of Brussels.

straight to the article

 

Montenegro gets boost for EU bid

Montenegro and the EU sign an accord putting the ex-Yugoslav state on the path to EU membership...

Croatia and the EU: the 28th member state?

Despite the considerable progress made by Croatia since the beginning of accession negotiations, much remains to be done, said panellists at a joint EPC-King Baudouin Foundation conference.

 

First EU-wide Deliberative Poll successfully creates EU public space

Continue reading "IHT: EU confident of ending constitution debacle by endorsing alternative this week..." »

October 10, 2007

"5 Myths About Sick Old Europe

 Statens Museum for Kunst Presents Dutch Landscape Drawings from the Royal Collection:

News

Rembrandt van Rijn (1606 - 1669), The Three Trees, 1643, Etching.

 

Clara Portela:

The EU’s “Sanctions Paradox”

SWP Comments 2007/C 18, October 2007, 8 pages

EU treaty 'same as Constitution'

The new EU treaty is "substantially equivalent" to the discarded constitution, a panel of British MPs argues.

Yes to a referendum, but not on this treaty

Hugo Brady outlines the different views in the UK towards the draft EU Treaty. His Centre for European Reform (CER) paper covers eurosceptic lobbies, pro-referendum campaigners, the British press and trade unions.

Barroso worried commission could take a hit in new EU treaty

 

5 Myths About Sick Old Europe

By Steven Hill

In the global economy, today’s winners can become tomorrow’s losers in a twinkling, and vice versa. Not so long ago, American pundits and economic analysts were snidely touting U.S. economic superiority to the “sick old man” of Europe. What a difference a few months can make. Today, with the stock market jittery over Iraq, the mortgage crisis, huge budget and trade deficits, and declining growth in productivity, investors are questioning the strength of the U.S. economy. Meanwhile, analysts point to the roaring economies of China and India as the only bright spots on the global horizon....

 

 

 

 

 

New Social Europe Journal – European Foreign Policy

Continue reading ""5 Myths About Sick Old Europe" »

October 08, 2007

"EU hopes for Lisbon treaty deal

The EU: Nightmare of the Right

We’ve been tracking the US hard-right’s increasing take-over of British Eurosceptic rhetoric for some time; first it was Tom Tancredo who thinks there’s a secret plot to replace the dollar with the “Amero”, now it’s Ron Paul who’s scared of the “North American Union”. The major difference is that he makes an explicit link:..........

Europe's decade of reform draws to a close

I have yet to meet one politician in a large continental country with a plausible economic reform strategy, writes Wolfgang Münchau...

Letter from Europe: A new conservatism rises in Eastern Europe:

European lawmakers condemn efforts to teach creationism

A resolution approved Thursday by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe underlined concern about the rise of a new socially conservative agenda in several countries.

EU hopes for Lisbon treaty deal

European Union member states are increasingly confident that a contentious treaty to modernise the bloc's institutions will secure approval at a summit in Lisbon on October 18-19

Continue reading ""EU hopes for Lisbon treaty deal" »

October 05, 2007

"Key to Successful Migration Policy is Integration

Philippe Maystadt: Rich Europe, Poor Europe

Income convergence within the European Union has slowed with the accession of ex-communist countries in recent years, with disparities much larger than those found in the United States. Labor mobility also is much higher in the US, and the EU should take steps to decrease the supply of workers in depressed areas and increase it in booming regions.

Commission gives up on 'one share, one vote' reform

Internal Market Commissioner Charlie McCreevy has announced that he will be abandoning controversial plans aimed at making companies more accountable and efficient by awarding all shareholders equal voting rights.

Mcs Freudchildrensroom 04S

FreudChildrensRoom

 

How many countries are in the EU?

23? 27? 30? I was talking to a colleague this morning and we weren’t sure if Bulgaria was a member yet. Find out with this handy history page from the BBC.  It shows how the European Union has grown....

European military spending must be more equal

Does Europe Have Education Envy?

This is a guest blog post by our long-time reader and commentator Pat Patterson, who has studied Classics and Ancient History at the University of Southern California has been and currently is a teacher in the Orange and Los Angeles counties for the last 16 years:....

EU split on sanctioning Iran

 

[Comment] The penny or the bun: strategies for enlargement

Continue reading ""Key to Successful Migration Policy is Integration" »

October 02, 2007

"Interview: Multilingualism 'declining' in EU

Interview: Multilingualism 'declining' in EU

Multilingualism, as specified in the Treaties on the functioning of the EU institutions, is in danger of disappearing in favour of a  single-language regime based on English, warns Abdou Diouf, secretary-general of the International Francophone Organisation (OIF), in an interview with EurActiv.

Diouf: 'Language is inseparable from democracy'

Multilingualism, as specified in the Treaties on the functioning of the EU institutions, is in danger of disappearing in favour of a  single-language regime based on English, warns Abdou Diouf, secretary-general of the International Francophone Organisation (OIF), in an interview with EurActiv.

Radio Netherlands: Europe scores high on anti-corruption index

 EU hits Half Century | Hard News

Why Europe needs to assert itself in the world

By Martti Ahtisaari and Joschka Fischer

 Making the EU a diplomatic force

Martti Ahtisaari and Joschka Fischer make a strong plea for a European Common Foreign policy in the Financial Times:

But, despite these successes, the EU continues to underperform on the world stage. Since the Iraq war and the French and Dutch No votes on the constitutional treaty, the EU has shown the faltering confidence of adolescence. European leaders, who struggle to adapt to a new global environment characterised by a weakened US, a resurgent Russia and a rising China, have too often turned inwards.....

Europe in Iraq? Only On Its Own Terms

I asked a sampling of European analysts what Europe could do to help stabilize Iraq. Most of the 14 respondents from ten European countries note the high stakes for the continent and its limited capabilities to contribute to stabilization efforts....

Continue reading ""Interview: Multilingualism 'declining' in EU" »

September 29, 2007

"EU communication remains an 'ongoing challenge'

DOSSIER: The EU at loose ends over Burma | 28/09/2007

The repression of the protest movement is increasingly intense in Burma. Buddhist monks have been demonstrating against the military regime since mid August. Monasteries are locked shut this September 28th and officially nine people have been killed by the military force since Wednesday. How can Europe react in order to make Rangoon loosen its iron grip on the country?

The Polish Women's Party is baring all for the upcoming elections.
REUTERS

The Polish Women's Party is baring all for the upcoming elections.

 

Deliberative democracy can help EU address democratic deficit

Consulting elites offers deliberation but without political equality, whereas consulting the people offers political equality but without deliberation, writes James Fishkin of Stanford University for the Tomorrow's Europe project.

EU communication remains an 'ongoing challenge'

Green MEP Helga Trüpel talks about the ongoing challenge of communicating EU policies, the different views among the institutions over a joint approach and how to ultimately win the hearts and minds of EU citizens.

Interview: EU communication clashes with vested interests

Ahead of the Commission's presentation of the new communication priorities for the EU institutions next week (3 October), MEP Helga Trüpel explains why there will be resistance from the Parliament and Council and argues in favour of a legal basis for communication policy.

The EU's international economic relations: How many voices?

Published in Bruegel's collection of essays , Benoît Coeuré and Jean Pisani-Ferry's contribution assesses the problems faced by the EU in its attempts to play a leading role on the world stage.

Calls for 'a more social' Europe are unjustified

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September 21, 2007

"EU-Russia relations after the September proposal on energy liberalisation

Lessons for Europe if Belgium fails

The existence of the EU allows us to contemplate a resurgence in national sentiment without fear of violence, writes Robin Shepherd...

A Separatist Revolution Percolates in Belgium

Culture clash may break up Belgium

In Belgium, it is business as usual. Trains run, the prime minister greets visiting foreign leaders, social security benefits are paid and the country's famed...