This fact sheet sums up and dissects the major arguments against public policy action on CEO pay.
Read moreThis fact sheet sums up and dissects the major arguments against public policy action on CEO pay.
Read moreA new report finds that bans on capital controls are outdated and a hindrance to developing nations.
Read moreAn analysis of new proposals for change.
Read moreObama administration must overhaul U.S. policy toward Africa.
Read moreDedrick Muhammad and the Institute for Policy Studies have once again partnered with United For A Fair Economy for the “State of the Dream 2009: The Silent Depression.”
Read moreAmericans recognize the need to act on our current crisis but detest the idea that ordinary taxpayers should bear the brunt of bailing out the kingpins of Wall Street.
Read moreThe Obama administration should take advantage of promising new trends in Latin America to seek more effective and more humane drug control policies both at home and abroad.
Read moreThe approximately $4.1 trillion that the United States and European governments have committed to bail out financial firms is 40 times the money they’re spending to fight climate and poverty crises in the developing world.
Read moreSerious economic engagement with North Korea can help improve the human rights situation in one of the bleakest parts of the globe.
Read moreThe following document is a series of talking points, in an easy-to-read question-and-answer format, on the key questions being discussed today about the global economic meltdown.
Read moreTreasury Department’s new rules clarify some provisions in the bailout but fail to set monetary limits for CEO pay.
Read moreThis powerful indictment of the U.S. security state now features an updated epilogue.
Read more“Collateral damage” is a euphemism used by U.S. military officials to mask large levels of death and destruction. This report uncovers its true meaning.
Read moreA Critique of the World Bank’s Strategic Framework for Development and Climate Change.
Read moreFrom the report “Dirty is the New Clean,” new facts about the World Bank Group’s lending to coal, oil, and gas which is up 94% from 2007.
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