From Hero to Villain: The Arab World’s Hugo Chavez Arc
His dalliances with the likes of Gaddafi and Assad may have soured the Arab public on a figure with whom it was disposed to be sympathetic.
His dalliances with the likes of Gaddafi and Assad may have soured the Arab public on a figure with whom it was disposed to be sympathetic.
Nearly 20 years since NAFTA went into effect, its empty promises have been laid bare for the people of Mexico.
Compared with ordinary Americans, CEOs pushing cuts have little to lose. CEO-backed cuts would reduce retirement benefits for a typical home care worker by almost 16 percent.
Saudi Arabia is a dubious choice to team with to promote democracy in Syria.
Czechoslovakia, though it no longer exists, remains a symbol of courageous resistance and sensible conflict resolution
How did Europe wind up eating horsemeat?
How benefit cuts would impact health industry CEOs versus home health aides.
While Abu Ghaith’s trial venue provided the major source of debate on his fate in the U.S., foreign policy experts expressed more interest in how he came into U.S. hands.
What scared Washington most about Chavez was not his failures or idiosyncrasies. It was his success.
Along with the divide between rich and poor in Europe, another has opened between the mobile and the stationary.
73 civil society organizations urge members of the Green Climate Fund board to pass rules promoting public participation, transparency and accountability.
The active and engaged participation of civil society at the Board and country level is essential for creating an effective, equitable and environmentally sound Fund that can be responsive to the differentiated needs of men and women, minorities and indigenous peoples increasingly impacted by climate change.
Comparing Hugo Chavez’s accomplishments to his U.S. obits was like taking a trip through Alice’s looking glass.
Israel seems to have fewer and fewer qualms about being branded apartheid.
Nuke “option” in response to a cyberattack, the UN Temperance League.