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Dispatches
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Dispatches regularly airs on*:
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Mondays, 7:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.Mondays, 7:30 p.m. - 8:11 p.m.Sundays, 6:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.
* - Ottawa Schedule [view cross-country schedule for this program] Dispatches can now be heard between 7:30 to 8:30 weeknights. When Dispatches was launched early in 2001, one of the objectives wasto see how much of an appetite Canadians have for strong internationalcoverage beyond what CBC Radio News and the CBC Radio One networkprograms were already providing. The mail and the spring audienceratings showed that there is an enormous interest in coverage of worldevents and global issues. Dispatches returns this fall, following asummer season of new and rebroadcast material.Over the last 20 years, host Rick MacInnes Rae has been to justabout every place where major news stories have occurred. He knows whatit is like to be an eyewitness to history. He brings those reporting,writing and de-briefing skills to just about every subject Dispatchestackles.The majority of Dispatches reports are in documentary form. Thatmeans listeners are taken to places they might never have theopportunity to see, hear the voices of people from all over the worldand dramatically confront insights and issues that might have neverbeen presented to them before.Over the coming months, Dispatches listeners will be exposed to awider range of human emotions than they hear on conventionalworld-affairs programming. Nothing will be out of bounds. Don't besurprised to hear something funny or sarcastic, or warm and fuzzy, oreven inspirational among the dispatches from troubled lands andagonizing conflicts.Most importantly, Dispatches aims to tell the stories of the peoplewho actually live in the places we hear about in the news, if we hearabout them at all. Want to know more?Visit theDispatches website: http://www.cbc.ca/dispatches/
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Monday, January 21, 2008, 7:30 p.m.
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About the Show When Dispatches was launched as a pilot early in 2001, the objective was to see how much of an appetite Canadians have for strong international coverage beyond what CBC Radio News and the CBC Radio One network programs were already providing. The mail and audience ratings showed that there's an enormous appetite. Over the last 20 years or so, host Rick MacInnes-Rae has been to just about every place where major news stories have occurred. He knows what it is like to be an eyewitness to history. And he knows what it means to meet the people living through it. Rick brings those reporting, writing and de-briefing skills to just about every subject Dispatches tackles. Most Dispatches reports are in documentary form. That means our reporters take listeners to places they might never have the opportunity to see, introduce them to people they would never have the chance to meet, and present them with insights and concerns they might never have confronted before. Dispatches listeners witness a wider range of human emotions than they hear on conventional world-affairs programming. Nothing is out of bounds. Don't be surprised to hear something funny or sarcastic, or warm and fuzzy -- or even inspirational -- among the reports from troubled lands and agonizing conflicts. Most importantly, Dispatches aims to tell the stories of the people who actually live in the places we might hear about in the news, even though they might not have made the headlines yet.
. Robert Kaplan Archives Atlantic Unbound | ArchiveRobert D. Kaplan http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/kaplan/images/kaplan.gifRobert D. Kaplan's career started at a small U.S. newspaper, but he soon grew frustrated with the work and began writing on his own, as an overseas stringer and freelancer.Eight years later his byline finally appeared in a major national magazine, and soon after he began writing regularly for The Atlantic Monthly.Now a correspondent for The Atlantic, Kaplan has reported onassignment for the magazine from Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Asia,Latin America, and the United States. He has been prolific in recentyears. His books include Imperial Grunts (2005), Eastward to Tartary: Travels in the Balkans, the Middle East, and the Caucasus (2000), The Coming Anarchy: Shattering the Dreams of the Post Cold War (2000), An Empire Wilderness: Travels Into America's Future (1998), The Ends of the Earth (1995), The Arabists: The Romance of an American Elite (1993), and Balkan Ghosts: A Journey Through History (1993), all of which grew out of Atlantic articles.Kaplan has been writing as a foreign correspondent for more thantwenty years, and his two-decades' worth of traveling and reportingexperience—much of which he has accumulated in the world's mostdifficult and dangerous places— inform even his briefest contributions.His writing always combines on-the-ground reporting, rich academiccontext, a deep regard for the past, and an abiding concern for thefuture. .....Recent articles by Robert D. Kaplan: January/February 2008WaterworldIs Bangladesh going under? November 1, 2007The Next FrontierThe creation of AFRICOM, the U.S. military's new Africa Command,offers the hope of steady, low-key progress in the war on terror. November 2007 UnboundIt's the Tribes, Stupid!Quelling anarchy in Iraq, Pakistan, and elsewhere, will requirebuilding on tribal loyalties—not imposing democracy from the top down. November 2007America』s Elegant DeclineHulls in the water could soon displace boots on the ground as themost important military catchphrase of our time. But our Navy isstretched thin. How we manage dwindling naval resources will go a longway toward determining our future standing in the world. October 4, 2007Burma』s Next ChapterWill the collapse of Burma』s oppressive junta bring democracy or ethnic turmoil? October 18, 2007Earth, Fire, WaterRevisiting the Armenian genocide. October 24, 2007The Navy』s New Flat-Earth StrategyThe U.S. unveils a collaborative plan for policing the seas. September 11, 2007Bottom-Up ProgressRobert D. Kaplan gives credence to the testimony of Petraeus and Crocker and warns against a hasty withdrawal from Iraq. September 2007 UnboundMilitary AirThe future of economy class? September 2007 UnboundOutsourcing ConflictFor all the notoriety of private military contractors likeBlackwater, they represent an important aspect of the future of war.And that future is not all bad. September 2007The Plane That Would Bomb IranInside the cockpit and culture of the B-2, whose pilots may carry the greatest responsibility in the U.S. military today Slideshow: \"Spirit in the Sky.\"] August 24, 2007Rereading Vietnam The Vietnam analogy looms ever larger in the debate over Iraq, butthe U.S. military has memories of that conflict that the public doesn't. May 4, 2007Foreign Policy: Munich Versus Vietnam"At the moment, the Vietnam analogy has the upper-hand. But don't count Munich out." April 10, 2007Smoke and MirrorsWhat the State Department is not accomplishing in Iraq. January 22, 2007Was the Iraq Study Group Report Really a Flop?For a document that was supposedly "dead-on-arrival," it's certainly having a strong influence. January/February 2007A Historian For Our TimeThucydides may have been more trustworthy, but Herodotus would havebeen more fun to share a wineskin with—and is a far better guide to thepresent. December 6, 2006The Iraq Study GroupA reaction December 29, 2006That's CharacterThe dignity of Ford's post-presidency. October 22, 2006We Can't Just WithdrawIraq may be closer to an explosion of genocide than we know. October 2006When North Korea FallsThe furor over Kim Jong Il』s missile tests and nuclear brinksmanshipobscures the real threat: the prospect of North Korea』s catastrophiccollapse. How the regime ends could determine the balance of power inAsia for decades. The likely winner? China. September 2006Hunting the Taliban in Las VegasIn trailers just minutes away from the slot machines, Air Forcepilots control Predators over Iraq and Afghanistan. A case study in themarvels—and limits—of modern military technology. May 2006Colonel Cross of the GurkhasIn the mountains of strife-torn Nepal, some lessons about modern warfare from a British throwback. April 2006The Coming Normalcy?Whatever else the American occupation of Iraq may be, it serves as alaboratory for ideas about how to wring stability out of chaos—thegreat foreign-policy challenge of the twenty-first century. October 2005Imperial GruntsWith the Army Special Forces in the Philippines and Afghanistan—laboratories of counterinsurgency. June 2005 How We Would Fight ChinaThe Middle East is just a blip. The American military contest withChina in the Pacific will define the twenty-first century. And Chinawill be a more formidable adversary than Russia ever was. April 2005America's African Rifles"Every time you fire, a bad guy should bleed!" At the heart of theU.S. military's imperial venture is the training of indigenous troopsaround the world—and at the heart of that training is the rifle range.A report from Niger. December 2004At the Gates of BrusselsIf Recep Tayyip Erdogan gets his way, Turkey will be more Islamic and Europe will be more Turkish. Both would be good news. November 2004The Media and the MilitaryAmerican reporters would shudder to think that they harbor class prejudice—but they do. July/August 2004Five Days in FallujahOur correspondent accompanied the first unit of Marines to assaultFallujah after the murder and mutilation last April of four Americancivilians. May 2004How Do I Look?Body armor is a must in some lines of work, and it gives "fashion plate" a whole new meaning. March 2004The Man Who Would Be KhanA new breed of American soldier—call him the soldier-diplomat—hascome into being since the end of the Cold War. Meet the colonel who wasour man in Mongolia, an officer who probably wielded more localinfluence than many Mongol rulers of yore. December 2003The Holy MountainIntimations of the geopolitical future in a place where time stands still. November 2003The Story of a War July/August 2003Supremacy by StealthIt is a cliché these days to observe that the United States nowpossesses a global empire—different from Britain's and Rome's but anempire nonetheless. It is time to move beyond a statement of theobvious. Our recent effort in Iraq, with its large-scale mobilizationof troops and immense concentration of risk, is not indicative of howwe will want to act in the future. So how should we operate on atactical level to manage an unruly world? What are the rules and whatare the tools? May 2003Euphorias of HatredThe grim lessons of a novel by Gogol. April 2003A Tale of Two ColoniesOur correspondent travels to Yemen and Eritrea, and finds that thewar on terrorism is forcing U.S. involvement with the one country'stribal turbulence and the other's obsessive fear of chaos. November 2002A Post-Saddam ScenarioIraq could become America's primary staging ground in the MiddleEast. And the greatest beneficial effect could come next door, in Iran. March 2002The World in 2005Hidden in plain sight. December 2001Looking the World in the EyeSamuel Huntington is a mild-mannered man whose sharp opinions—aboutthe collision of Islam and the West, about the role of the military ina liberal society, about what separates countries that work fromcountries that don't—have proved to be as prescient as they have beencontroversial. Huntington has been ridiculed and vilified, but in thedecades ahead his view of the world will be the way it really looks. June 2001Roman AfricaThe economic and political fault lines that separated Carthage andNumidia are the ones that separate Tunisia and Algeria—and the Romansdrew them. November 2000Where Europe VanishesCivilizations have collided in the Caucasus Mountains since the dawnof history, and the region's dozens of ethnic groups have been notedfor "obstinacy and ferocity" since ancient times. Stalin was born inthese mountains, and it was also here that the Soviet empire began tocrumble. The story of the Republic of Georgia illustrates that thepeoples of the Caucasus may prove as incapable of self-rule as theywere resistant to rule by outsiders. September 2000The Lawless FrontierThe tribal lands of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border reveal thefuture of conflict in the Subcontinent, along with the dark side ofglobalization. January 2000Israel NowThe author, a former resident of Israel, finds that raw power andeconomic forces are redrawing the map of the Middle East, and peacetalks will merely formalize the emerging reality. December 1997Was Democracy Just a Moment?The global triumph of democracy was to be the glorious climax of theAmerican Century. But democracy may not be the system that will bestserve the world—or even the one that will prevail in places that nowconsider themselves bastions of freedom. March 1996A Bazaari's WorldTo understand Iran—and perhaps even the future of other parts of theIslamic world—one must understand a man like Mohsen Rafiqdoost. February 1994The Coming AnarchyHow scarcity, crime, overpopulation, tribalism, and disease are rapidly destroying the social fabric of our planet. February 1993Syria: Identity CrisisHafez-al Assad has so far prevented the Balkanization of his country, but he can't last forever. August 1992Tales From the BazaarAs individuals, few American diplomats have been as anonymous as themembers of the group known as Arabists. And yet as a group, no cadre ofdiplomats has aroused more suspicion than the Arab experts have.Arabists are frequently accused of romanticism, of having "gonenative"—charges brought with a special vehemence as a result of therecent Gulf War and the events leading up to it. Who are the Arabists?Where did they come from? Do they deserve our confidence? November 1987Sons of DevilsIn a turbulent region the stateless Kurds playthe role of spoiler. April 1986Sudan: A Microcosm of Africa's IllsHostile neighbors and militant rebels imperil Khartoum's new regime. Click here for more Robert D. KaplanAuthor Index Articles currently available on The Atlantic Monthly's Web site[*]The Man Who Would Be Khan, March 2004Meet Colonel Tom Wilhelm, one of a new breed of soldier-diplomats that has come into being since the end of the Cold War.[*]The Story of A War, November 2003Kaplan reviews The Iraq War: A Military History by Williamson Murray and Major General Robert H. Scales Jr.[*]Supremacy by Stealth, July/August 2003It is a cliché these days to observe that the United States nowpossesses a global empire. Our recent effort in Iraq, with itslarge-scale mobilization of troops and immense concentration of risk,is not indicative of how we will want to act in the future. So howshould we operate on a tactical level to preserve our imperium?[*]Supremacy by Stealth, July/August 2003It's a cliché these days to observe that the United States nowpossesses a global empire. It is time to move beyond a statement of theobvious. How should we operate on a tactical level to preserve ourimperium? What are the rules and what are the tools?[*]Euphorias of Hatred, May 2003The grim lessons of a novel by Gogol.[*]A Tale of Two Colonies, April 2003Our correspondent travels to Yemen and Eritrea, two countries centralto U.S. military efforts in the war on terrorism, and describes growinginvolvement in two dramatically different political landscapes.[*]A Post-Saddam Scenario, November 2002Iraq could become America's primary staging ground in the Middle East.And the greatest beneficial effect could come next door, in Iran.[*]The World in 2005, March 2002American eyes are focused at the moment mainly on the war againstterrorism. But powerful forces continue to shape the world withoutregard to that war—and will affect how we wage it.[*]Looking the World in the Eye, December 2001Samuel Huntington is a mild-mannered man whose sharp opinions—about thecollision of Islam and the West, about the role of the military in aliberal society, about what separates countries that work fromcountries that don't—have proved to be as prescient as they have beencontroversial.[*]Roman Africa, June 2001The economic and political fault lines that separated Carthage andNumidia are the ones that separate Tunisia and Algeria—and the Romansdrew them.[*]Where Europe Vanishes,November 2000The Caucasus region -- bounded by Russia and Iran, by the Black Sea andthe Caspian -- is rich in oil and hatred. It is where Stalin was born,and where the Soviet empire died.[*]The Lawless Frontier,September 2000 "Pakistan" is crumbling fast. The country is a Yugoslavia in the making, but with nuclear weapons.[*]The Return of Ancient Times,June 2000 Human progress has often been made in the space between idealism and savagery.[*]What Makes History,March 2000 Where the Enlightenment encountered reality.[*]Israel Now,January 2000The author, a former resident of Israel, finds that raw power andeconomic forces are redrawing the map of the Middle East, and peacetalks will merely formalize the emerging reality.[*]Four-Star Generalists,October 1999 In a lackluster age for many of the liberal arts, the discipline of military history retains exceptional relevance.[*]China: A World Power Again,August 1999 What is usual for China is unusual for the West -- at least in recent memory.[*]Kissinger, Metternich, and Realism,June 1999 What Kissinger has always offered is a grimly persuasive view of the human condition.[*]Hoods Against Democrats,December 1998 In Bulgaria the distinction between the state and organized crime is clear -- for now.[*]The Fulcrum of Europe,September 1998 The tendency in the West is to dismiss Romania as a sadly decrepit irrelevance. Will we discover the mistake in time?[*]Travels Into America's Future,August 1998Imagine a land in which the dominant culture is an internationalizedone, at every level; in which the political units that really matterare confederations of city-states; in which loyalty is an economicconcept, when it is not obsolete; in which "the United States" existschiefly to provide military protection. That is the land ourcorrespondent glimpses, and it is no longer beyond the horizon.[*]Night Train to Istanbul,July 1998[*]Travels Into America's Future,July 1998The author, who has long experience reporting from dimly understoodregions of the world, reports from his dimly understood native land,and his excursions expose the borderless forces that are pushingAmerica into its next life.[*]New England Places,May 1998The Atlantic has been headquartered in New England for 140years, so the staff members and contributing editors have had plenty oftime to explore it. Here are some of our favorite spots.[*]And Now for the News,March 1998The disturbing freshness of Gibbon's Decline and Fall.[*]Special Intelligence,February 1998The roles of the CIA and the military may merge, in the form of "Special Forces," made up of data-analyzing urban commandos.[*]History Moving North,March 1997As Mexican society fragments, the impact will hit the United Stateswith force -- and U.S. society is likely to fragment in some of thesame ways.[*]Was Democracy Just a Moment?,December 1997The global triumph of democracy was to be the glorious climax of theAmerican Century. But democracy may not be the system that will bestserve the world -- or even the one that will prevail in places that nowconsider themselves bastions of freedom.[*]Fort Leavenworth and the Eclipse of Nationhood,September 1996 Fort Leavenworth, in Kansas, has for more than a century been the place where the Army has prepared its most promising commanders to "fight the next war." Today, when military intellectuals at Fort Leavenworth ponder America's future -- as much through the reading of ancient history as through the analysis of computerized scenarios -- they are profoundly unsettled by what they see.[*]Proportionalism,August 1996What should the United States do in the Third World, where there's too much to do and too much that can't be done?[*]A Bazaari's World, March 1996 To understand Iran -- and perhaps even the future of other parts of the Islamic world -- one must understand a man like Mohsen Rafiqdoost.[*]The Coming Anarchy, February 1994 How scarcity, crime, overpopulation, tribalism, and disease are rapidly destroying the social fabric of our planet.[*]Tales from the Bazaar, August 1992 As individuals, few American diplomats have been as anonymous as the members of the group known as the Arabists. And yet as a group, no cadre of diplomats has aroused more suspicion than the Arab experts have. Who are the Arabists? Where did they come from? Do they deserve our confidence?[*]The Character Issue, May 1990 Can the Germans get it right this time?[*]The Balkans: Europe's Third World, July 1989 Poverty and ethnic strife in southeastern Europe will give the Russians a headache for years to come.[*]Sons of Devils,November 1987In a turbulent region the stateless Kurds play the role of spoiler. Books by Kaplan[*]Surrender or Starve: The Wars Behind the Famine, published September 1988, reprinted November 2003[*]Soldiers of God: With the Mujahidin in Afghanistan (also titled Soldiers of God: With Islamic Warriors in Afghanistan and Pakistan), published February 1990, reprinted November 2001[*]Balkan Ghosts: A Journey Through History, published February 1993, reprinted March 1994[*]Arabists: The Romance of an American Elite, published September 1993[*]The Ends of the Earth: From Togo to Turkmenistan, from Iran to Cambodia - A Journey to the Frontiers of Anarchy, published February 1996, republished January 2000[*]An Empire Wilderness: Travels into America's Future, published August 1998[*]The Coming Anarchy: Shattering the Dreams of the Post Cold War, published January 2000[*]Eastward to Tartary: Travels in the Balkans, the Middle East, and the Caucasus, published November 2000[*]Warrior Politics: Why Leadership Demands a Pagan Ethos, published December 2001[*]Mediterranean Winter: The Pleasures of History and Landscape in Tunisia, Sicily, Dalmatia, and Greece, published February 2004[*]Imperial Grunts: The American Military On The Ground, published September 2005[*]Hog Pilots, Blue Water Grunts: The American Military in the Air, at Sea, and on the Ground, published September 2007Contributions to Other Editions[*]Lord Jim & Nostromo, published April 2000 (Introduction, Modern Library 1400061334Edition)[*]Travelers' Tales Turkey: True Stories, published September 2002 (Contributor)[*]Taras Bulba, published April 2003 (Introduction, Modern Library Edition)[edit] TriviaKaplan is unrelated to journalist Fred Kaplan, with whom he is occasionally confused. He is also sometimes confused with neoconservative scholar Robert Kagan.[edit] References[*]Lipsky, David. 「Appropriating the Globe」, The New York Times, November 27, 2005. Accessed 24 April, 2007[*]Bernstein, Richard 「The Coming Anarchy: Dashing Hopes of Global Harmony」, The New York Times, February 23, 2000. Accessed 21 May, 2007.[*]^ Lipsky, David. 「Appropriating the Globe」, The New York Times, November 27, 2005. Accessed 24 April, 2007[*]^ Bernstein, Richard 「The Coming Anarchy: Dashing Hopes of Global Harmony」, The New York Times, February 23, 2000. Accessed 21 May, 2007.[*]^ Garfinkle, Adam 「The Sky is Always Falling」, The New York Times, 19 March, 2000. Accessed 21 May, 2007.[*]^ Bissell, Tom 「Euphorias of Perrier: The Case Against Robert D. Kaplan」, The Virginia Quarterly Review, Summer 2006. Accessed 24 April, 2007.[*]^ Bissell, Tom 「Euphorias of Perrier: The Case Against Robert D. Kaplan」, The Virginia Quarterly Review, Summer 2006. Accessed 24 April, 2007.[*]^ Kagan, Donald 「Saber Rattling for Democracy 」, The New York Times, February 3, 2002. Accessed 2 July, 2007.[*]^ Slate Online 「No Relation No. 13: The Foreign Policy Edition」, October 31, 2001.[edit] VideoIn Depth: Robert Kaplan, Book TV, April 3-4, 2005, [edit] External links[*]Coming Anarchy - a leading foreign affairs blog inspired by the ideas of Kaplan.[*]Robert Kaplan interview, The American Enterprise, January/February 2006.[*]\"Robert Kaplan: Empire Without Apologies\" by Andrew J. Bacevich, The Nation Magazine, September 26, 2005[*]Euphorias of Perrier: The Case Against Robert D. Kaplan, by Tom Bissell, Virginia Quarterly Review, Summer 2006. http://www.chinanewsweek.com.cn/weekimg/logo.gif
往期回顾
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封面文章:人人都是城里人
年度期号:第45期
总 期 号:351
出版日期:2007年12月10日
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封面文章:中国-欧洲:蜜月之后
年度期号:第44期
总 期 号:350
出版日期:2007年12月3日
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封面文章:到县城去买房
年度期号:第43期
总 期 号:349
出版日期:2007年11月26日
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封面文章:揭秘台海破冰之旅
年度期号:第42期
总 期 号:348
出版日期:2007年11月19日
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封面文章:中国式规划病
年度期号:第41期
总 期 号:347
出版日期:2007年11月12日
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封面文章:最好的大学
年度期号:第40期
总 期 号:346
出版日期:2007年11月5日
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封面文章:从阿波罗到嫦娥
年度期号:第39期
总 期 号:345
出版日期:2007年10月29日
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封面文章:改革:中国命运的关键抉择
年度期号:第38期
总 期 号:344
出版日期:2007年10月22日
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封面文章:和田「欲」
年度期号:第37期
总 期 号:343
出版日期:2007年10月15日
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封面文章:「排毒教父」林常光真相
年度期号:第36期
总 期 号:342
出版日期:2007年10月1日
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封面文章:东京 下一站
年度期号:第35期
总 期 号:341
出版日期:2007年9月24日
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封面文章:房改十年轮回
年度期号:第34期
总 期 号:340
出版日期:2007年9月17日
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Magazines that matter[*] http://www.monocle.com/Magazine/volume-01/Issue-10/ Monocle[*] http://www.adbusters.org/[*] http://www.economist.com/[*] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/[*] http://www.foreignaffairs.org/[*] http://www.tnr.com/ the New Republic[*] http://www.nationalreview.com/[*] http://hir.harvard.edu/Harvard International Review[*] http://www.thenation.com/[*] http://www.thenation.com/archive/[*] http://www.tikkun.org/magazine[*] http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/[*] http://www.harpers.org/[*] http://www.theatlantic.com/[*] http://www.walrusmagazine.com/[*] http://www.macleans.ca/[*] http://www.newyorker.com/[*] http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032542/site/newsweek/[*] http://www.newsweek.com/[*] http://www.time.com/time/magazine/current/[*] http://www.time.com/[*] http://www.motherjones.com/[*] http://www.zmag.org/[*] http://www.wsj.com/ Wallstreet Journal[*][*] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Political_magazines[*] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:News_magazines[*] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Alternative_press[*] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Canadian_political_magazines[*] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Canadian_cultural_magazines[*] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Independent_Media_Center[*] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Citizen_journalism TVO's "Agenda" http://www.tvo.org/cfmx/tvoorg/theagenda/Thursday, March 20 2008 8:00 PMEric Margolis | Cuba After FidelOlympic boycott anyone? Plus: waiting for Cuba's next generation.Go to episode page»Monday, March 24 2008 8:00 PMPartition as a Political Solution | Stephen BruntPartition as the solution to political problems. And: Do you know who Bobby Orr is?Go to episode page»[*]Foreign AffairsUs and Them: The Enduring Power of Ethnic NationalismBy Jerry Z. Muller[*]Partition Conflicts & Peace ProcessesThe Partition Debate: Pros and Cons»Submit show ideas and join the discussion on http://www.tvo.org/TVOOrg/Images/yourAgendaBadge25_012808.jpg»Check out The Agenda group on http://www.tvo.org/TVOOrg/Images/facebookAgenda_012808.jpg created by Jesse Tebbs of York University»Follow The Agenda on http://www.tvo.org/TVOOrg/Images/twitterAgenda012508.jpghttp://www.tvo.org/theagenda/images/yourAgendaBadgeSm.gifhttp://www.tvo.org/cfmx/tvoorg/theagenda/index.cfm?page_id=3&blog_id=81&action=blogChina surpasses US as top web userhttp://www.tvo.org/theagenda/images/tagicon.gifForeign Affairs - Asia,Our Changing Culture,Technology NewsPosted on: 17 March 2008 by Mike MinerMorepeople online are within the borders of the People's Republic of Chinathan in any other country. BDA China, a Beijing-based consulting firmannounced on March 13 that China surpassed the United States as thelargest internet market, as measured …more»>>Next Page >Main Blogs Page / Blog HomeBreak 'em Up?Posted on: 24 March 2008 by Steve PaikinIf you look around the world over the past couple of decades, it looksas if, unlike what that great foreign policy analyst Neil Sedaka wrote,breaking up isn't that hard to do. In fact, partitioning countriesseems to be an increasingly appealing option for ethnic groups that nolonger want to live together under one national roof. Sometimes, it works relatively well.Witness Czechoslovakia's peaceful breakup into the Czech and Slovak republics. Othertimes, it's disastrous. Witness the former Yugoslavia's orgy of mayhem,which created independent Serbia and Montenegro, Slovenia, Croatia,Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Macedonia. And now, of course, Kosovohas officially split from Serbia for the first time since 1389, and isgaining international recognition to become its own country. Thequestion becomes more intriguing as the Iraq War enters its sixth year.Is partition an option for that country? Is there actually an Iraqinationality, or should would the world (and Iraqis) prefer to recognizethe individual ethnic groups that make up that country, and give eachof them their own state (Sunni, Shia, and Kurdish). We'll debate that tonight on the program. http://www.tvo.org/TVOOrg/Images/ericMargolis_thumb150_032408.jpgFinally,our good friend Eric Margolis was here last week talking about Tibet.Off the air, I asked him about the advisability of Kosovo's newindependence. To hear what he had to say, watch the web-exclusive video. Permalink | Email this| Add Comment Now | Commentshttp://www.tvo.org/cfmx/tvoorg/theagenda/index.cfm?page_id=3&action=blog&subaction=viewpost&post_id=7167&blog_id=43Home > Partitions Overview > The Partition Debatehttp://www.partitionconflicts.com/partitions/images/s.gifThe Partition Debate Whether or not to partition has become a critical policy issue in theBalkans and the Middle East. The policy has also been debated in thecontext of the Congo, Indonesia, and Sri Lanka. And it remains a potentirritant to the peace processes in Northern Ireland and South Asia.What are the arguments on either side?http://www.tvo.org/cfmx/tvoorg/theagenda/index.cfm?page_id=202 The Agenda at the Munk Centre - Ticket Registrationhttp://www.tvo.org/cfmx/tvoorg/theagenda/index.cfm?page_id=401Your Agenda 2.0 http://news.sina.com.cn/m/xwzk/index.html 中国新闻周刊 提示:最多24个字符(包括24)或12个汉字 http://blog.sina.com.cn/zgxwzkblog> 复制> 收藏本页
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·2005年度 ·2004年度 ·2003年度 ·2002年度 ·2001年度 ·2000年度
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封面文章:新政治家群体
年度期号:第9期
总 期 号:363
出版日期:2008年3月17日
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封面文章:财富民主
年度期号:第8期
总 期 号:362
出版日期:2008年3月10日
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封面文章:喧嚣之后
年度期号:第7期
总 期 号:361
出版日期:2008年3月3日
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封面文章:青铜时代
年度期号:第6期
总 期 号:360
出版日期:2008年2月25日
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封面文章:风雪中国
年度期号:第5期
总 期 号:359
出版日期:2008年2月4日
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封面文章:医改难改
年度期号:第4期
总 期 号:358
出版日期:2008年1月28日
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封面文章:中国「婚风暴」
年度期号:第3期
总 期 号:357
出版日期:2008年1月21日
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封面文章:我的2008
年度期号:第2期
总 期 号:356
出版日期:2008年1月14日
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封面文章:巴基斯坦的救赎
年度期号:第1期
总 期 号:355
出版日期:2008年1月7日
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封面文章:中国土地改革临界点
年度期号:第48期
总 期 号:354
出版日期:2007年12月31日
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封面文章:疯狂的养生
年度期号:第47期
总 期 号:353
出版日期:2007年12月24日
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封面文章:南京·回望1937~2007
年度期号:第46期
总 期 号:352
出版日期:2007年12月17日
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