ani Iran can find a new Soleimani By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 06 Jan 2020 16:58:02 +0000 Full Article
ani Macron, the lonely Europeanist By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 11:22:18 +0000 Full Article
ani The coronavirus has led to more authoritarianism for Turkey By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 20:00:26 +0000 Turkey is well into its second month since the first coronavirus case was diagnosed on March 10. As of May 5, the number of reported cases has reached almost 130,000, which puts Turkey among the top eight countries grappling with the deadly disease — ahead of even China and Iran. Fortunately, so far, the Turkish death… Full Article
ani 20190506 El Pais Daniel Kaufman By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 06 May 2019 20:24:38 +0000 Full Article
ani Urbanization and Land Reform under China’s Current Growth Model: Facts, Challenges and Directions for Future Reform By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 In the first installment of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center Policy Series, Nonresident Senior Fellow Tao Ran explores how China’s growth model since the mid-1990’s has led to a series of distortions in the country’s urban land use, housing price and migration patterns.The report further argues for a coordinated reform package in China’s land, household registration and… Full Article
ani Can Trump count on Manila to put pressure on North Korea? 3 points to know. By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Tue, 16 May 2017 12:00:21 +0000 Full Article
ani ReFormers Caucus kicks off its fight for meaningful campaign finance reform By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Thu, 05 Nov 2015 17:00:00 -0500 I was honored today to speak at the kick off meeting of the new ReFormers Caucus. This group of over 100 former members of the U.S. Senate, the House, and governors of both parties, has come together to fight for meaningful campaign finance reform. In the bipartisan spirit of the caucus, I shared speaking duties with Professor Richard Painter, who was the Bush administration ethics czar and my predecessor before I had a similar role in the Obama White House. As I told the distinguished audience of ReFormers (get the pun?) gathered over lunch on Capitol Hill, I wish they had existed when in my Obama administration role I was working for the passage of the Disclose Act. That bill would have brought true transparency to the post-Citizens United campaign finance system, yet it failed by just one vote in Congress. But it is not too late for Americans, working together, to secure enhanced transparency and other campaign finance changes that are desperately needed. Momentum is building, with increasing levels of public outrage, as reflected in state and local referenda passing in Maine, Seattle and San Francisco just this week, and much more to come at the federal, state and local level. Authors Norman Eisen Full Article
ani Eurozone desperately needs a fiscal transfer mechanism to soften the effects of competitiveness imbalances By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Thu, 18 Jun 2015 00:00:00 -0400 The eurozone has three problems: national debt obligations that cannot be met, medium-term imbalances in trade competitiveness, and long-term structural flaws. The short-run problem requires more of the monetary easing that Germany has, with appalling shortsightedness, been resisting, and less of the near-term fiscal restraint that Germany has, with equally appalling shortsightedness, been seeking. To insist that Greece meet all of its near-term current debt service obligations makes about as much sense as did French and British insistence that Germany honor its reparations obligations after World War I. The latter could not be and were not honored. The former cannot and will not be honored either. The medium-term problem is that, given a single currency, labor costs are too high in Greece and too low in Germany and some other northern European countries. Because adjustments in currency values cannot correct these imbalances, differences in growth of wages must do the job—either wage deflation and continued depression in Greece and other peripheral countries, wage inflation in Germany, or both. The former is a recipe for intense and sustained misery. The latter, however politically improbable it may now seem, is the better alternative. The long-term problem is that the eurozone lacks the fiscal transfer mechanisms necessary to soften the effects of competitiveness imbalances while other forms of adjustment take effect. This lack places extraordinary demands on the willingness of individual nations to undertake internal policies to reduce such imbalances. Until such fiscal transfer mechanisms are created, crises such as the current one are bound to recur. Present circumstances call for a combination of short-term expansionary policies that have to be led or accepted by the surplus nations, notably Germany, who will also have to recognize and accept that not all Greek debts will be paid or that debt service payments will not be made on time and at originally negotiated interest rates. The price for those concessions will be a current and credible commitment eventually to restore and maintain fiscal balance by the peripheral countries, notably Greece. Authors Henry J. Aaron Publication: The International Economy Image Source: © Vincent Kessler / Reuters Full Article
ani In Daniel Patrick Moynihan Prize speech, Ron Haskins and Isabel Sawhill stress importance of evidence-based policy By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 23 May 2016 16:33:00 -0400 Senior Fellows Ron Haskins and Isabel Sawhill are the first joint recipients of the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Prize from the American Academy of Political and Social Science (AAPSS). The prize is awarded each year to a leading policymaker, social scientist, or public intellectual whose career focuses on advancing the public good through social science. It was named after the late senator from New York and renowned sociologist Daniel Patrick Moynihan. The pair accepted the award May 12 at a ceremony in Washington, DC. In their joint lecture delivered at the ceremony, Haskins and Sawhill emphasized the importance of evidence-based public policy, highlighting Sawhill’s latest work in her book, Generation Unbound (Brookings, 2014). Watch their entire speech here: “Marriage is disappearing and more and more babies are born outside marriage,” Sawhill said during the lecture. “Right now, the proportion born outside of marriage is about 40 percent. It’s higher than that among African Americans and lower than that among the well-educated. But it’s no longer an issue that just affects the poor or minority groups.” Download Sawhill's slides » | Download Ron Haskins' slides » The power of evidence-based policy is finally being recognized, Haskins added. “One of the prime motivating factors of the current evidence-based movement,” he said, “is the understanding, now widespread, that most social programs either have not been well evaluated or they don’t work.” Haskins continued: Perhaps the most important social function of social science is to find and test programs that will reduce the nation’s social problems. The exploding movement of evidence-based policy and the many roots the movement is now planting, offer the best chance of fulfilling this vital mission of social science, of achieving, in other words, exactly the outcomes Moynihan had hoped for. He pointed toward the executive branch, state governments, and non-profits implementing policies that could make substantial progress against the nation’s social problems. Richard Reeves, a senior fellow at Brookings and co-director, with Haskins, of the Center on Children and Families (CCF), acknowledged Haskins and Sawhill’s “powerful and unique intellectual partnership” and their world-class work on families, poverty, opportunity, evidence, parenting, work, and education. Haskins and Sawhill were the first to be awarded jointly by the AAPSS, which recognizes their 15-year collaboration at Brookings and the Center on Children and Families, which they established. In addition to their work at CCF, the two co-wrote Creating an Opportunity Society (Brookings 2009) and serve as co-editors of The Future of Children, a policy journal that tackles issues that have an impact on children and families. Haskins and Sawhill join the ranks of both current and past Brookings scholars who have received the Moynihan Prize, including Alice Rivlin (recipient of the inaugural prize), Rebecca Blank, and William Julius Wilson along with other distinguished scholars and public servants. Want to learn more about the award’s namesake? Read Governance Studies Senior Fellow and historian Steve Hess’s account of Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s time in the Nixon White House in his book The Professor and the President (Brookings, 2014). Authors James King Full Article
ani Averting a new Iranian nuclear crisis By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Fri, 17 Jan 2020 15:15:10 +0000 Iran’s January 5, 2020 announcement that it no longer considers itself bound by the restrictions on its nuclear program contained in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA, aka the “nuclear deal”) raises the specter of the Islamic Republic racing to put in place the infrastructure needed to produce nuclear weapons quickly and the United… Full Article
ani Danish climate movement taken over by the establishment By www.marxist.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 10:27:42 +0100 This article was written before the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in lockdowns throughout the world, including Denmark. However, the points it raises about the co-option of the climate movement by the forces of the establishment remain unchanged – and are all the more relevant given the global health emergency posed by COVID-19. Full Article Denmark
ani Did the "Organic Elite" Sell Out to Monsanto? By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Feb 2011 08:50:33 -0500 By now, most of us have read the miscellaneous (numerous) statements from companies like Whole Foods, Organic Valley, Stonyfield, and the Non-GMO Project in defense of their participation in the Full Article Living
ani What’s the relationship between education, income, and favoring the Pakistani Taliban? By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 19 Oct 2015 10:28:00 -0400 The narratives on U.S. development aid to Pakistan—as well as Pakistan’s own development policy discussion—frequently invoke the conventional wisdom that more education and better economic opportunities result in lower extremism. In the debate surrounding the Kerry-Lugar-Berman bill in 2009, for instance, the late Ambassador Richard Holbrooke urged Congress to “target the economic and social roots of extremism in western Pakistan with more economic aid.” But evidence across various contexts, including in Pakistan, has not supported this notion (see Alan Kreuger’s What Makes a Terrorist for a good overview of this evidence). We know that many terrorists are educated. And lack of education and economic opportunities do not appear to drive support for terrorism and terrorist groups. I have argued that we need to focus on the quality and content of the educational curricula—in Pakistan’s case, they are rife with biases and intolerance, and designed to foster an exclusionary identity—to understand the relationship between education and attitudes toward extremism. My latest analysis with data from the March 2013 Pew Global Attitudes poll conducted in Pakistan sheds new light on the relationship between years of education and Pakistanis’ views of the Taliban, and lends supports to the conventional wisdom. The survey sampled 1,201 respondents throughout Pakistan, except the most insecure areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Baluchistan. This was a time of mounting terror attacks by the Pakistani Taliban (a few months after their attack on Malala), and came at the tail end of the Pakistan People's Party’s term in power, before the May 2013 general elections. On attitudes toward the Pakistani Taliban, or Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), 3 percent of respondents to the Pew poll said they had a very favorable view, 13 percent reported somewhat favorable views, while nearly 17 percent and 39 percent answered that they had somewhat unfavorable and very unfavorable views, respectively. A large percentage of respondents (28 percent) chose not to answer the question or said they did not know their views. This is typical with a sensitive survey question such as this one, in a context as insecure as Pakistan. So overall levels of support for the TTP are low, and the majority of respondents report having unfavorable views. The non-responses could reflect those who have unfavorable views but choose not to respond because of fear, or those who may simply not have an opinion on the Pakistani Taliban. The first part of my analysis cross-tabulates attitudes toward the TTP with education and income respectively. I look at the distribution of attitudes for each education and income category (with very and somewhat favorable views lumped together as favorable; similarly for unfavorable attitudes). Figure 1. Pakistani views on the Pakistani Taliban, by education level, 2013 Figure 1 shows that an increasing percentage of respondents report unfavorable views of the Taliban as education levels rise; and there is a decreasing percentage of non-responses at higher education levels (suggesting that more educated people have more confidence in their views, stronger views, or less fear). However, the percentage of respondents with favorable views of the Taliban, hovering between 10-20 percent, is not that different across education levels, and does not vary monotonically with education. Figure 2. Pakistani views on the Pakistani Taliban, by income level, 2013 Figure 2 shows views on the Pakistani Taliban by income level. While the percentage of non-responses is highest for the lowest income category, the percentages responding favorably and unfavorably do not change monotonically with income. We see broadly similar distributions of attitudes across the four income levels. But these cross-tabulations do not account for other factors that may affect attitudes: age, gender, and geographical location. Regressions (not shown here) accounting for these factors in addition to income and education show interesting results: relative to no education, higher education levels are associated with less favorable opinions of the Pakistani Taliban; these results are strongest for those with some university education, which is heartening. This confirms findings from focus groups I conducted with university students in Pakistan in May 2015. Students at public universities engaged in wide ranging political and social debates with each other on Pakistan and its identity, quoted Rousseau and Chomsky, and had more nuanced views on terrorism and the rest of the world relative to high school students I interviewed. This must at least partly be a result of the superior curriculum and variety of materials to which they are exposed at the college level. My regressions also show that older people have more unfavorable opinions toward the Taliban, relative to younger people; this is concerning and is consistent with the trend toward rising extremist views in Pakistan’s younger population. The problems in Pakistan’s curriculum that began in the 1980s are likely to be at least partly responsible for this trend. Urban respondents seem to have more favorable opinions toward the Taliban than rural respondents; respondents from Punjab and Baluchistan have more favorable opinions toward the Taliban relative to those from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which as a province has had a closer and more direct experience with terror. The regression shows no relationship of income with attitudes, as was suggested by Figure 2. Overall, the Pew 2013 data show evidence of a positive relationship between more education and lack of support for the Taliban, suggesting that the persisting but increasingly discredited conventional wisdom on these issues may hold some truth after all. These results should be complemented with additional years of data. That is what I will work on next. Authors Madiha Afzal Full Article
ani 626 organizations back legislation to address climate change By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 10 Jan 2019 15:27:27 -0500 A modest proposal Full Article Science
ani These 3 companies are the future of house cleaning By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 03 May 2019 10:00:00 -0400 We're loving the move toward quasi-edible ingredients, plastic-free packaging, and refill pouches, among other things. Full Article Living
ani 6 habits that keep me organized By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 25 Sep 2019 07:00:00 -0400 Organization doesn't just happen; it has to be cultivated – and this is my approach. Full Article Living
ani "Fish Chopper" Animation Shows the Gruesome, Deadly Side of Power Plant Cooling Towers (Video) By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 01 Jun 2011 11:46:00 -0400 The Sierra Club is pointing attention to the once-through cooling systems used by many power plants. Power plants suck up over 200 billion gallons of water a day, and with that water comes millions of fish that don't exactly Full Article Technology
ani Avocado mania continues to suck Chile dry By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 24 May 2018 11:25:00 -0400 Residents of the main avocado-producing area say they're forced to drink contaminated water delivered by truck because rivers and aquifers are being drained by avocado agribusiness. Full Article Living
ani 30 Biggest Stories of the Year in Animal Conservation and Extinctions By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 12 Dec 2012 07:00:00 -0500 The good, the bad, and the we-can-fix-its of the year all gathered up in one place. Full Article Science
ani Wineries For Climate Protection – the Manifesto! By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 19 Apr 2012 05:43:22 -0400 Here's the manifesto by the Spanish wine industry to fight climate change by making wineries more eco-friendly. Vines are very sensitive to climate change and so their environment, landscape, culture and tradition need protecting. Full Article Science
ani Eco Wine Review: Wrath 2010 Ex Anima Chardonnay By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 03 May 2012 05:52:29 -0400 Wrath's 2010 Ex Anima Chardonnay is billowing with so much tropical fruit that you half expect Kokomo to start playing on the jukebox the second you uncork it. I swear this wine was a Piña Colada in its past life. Full Article Living
ani Organic Ginger-Orange Cocktail Made with Bourbon and Sake By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 21 Jun 2012 12:34:28 -0400 Using fresh organic ginger and locally grown oranges, the eco-friendly Medlock Ames has created a drink that is complex, fresh and tangy. Full Article Living
ani The Spanish Porrón- an Eco-Friendly Way to Drink Wine By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 20 Dec 2012 04:14:19 -0500 The Spanish porrón is a glass pitcher in the shape of a watering can that gets passed around at big events. That way, there is no need for plastic glasses or washing up! Full Article Design
ani Organic winemaker faces jail for refusing to apply pesticide By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 24 Feb 2014 15:41:27 -0500 The French agriculture ministry has sentenced Emmanuel Giboulot six months in jail for not taking preventative measures against a bacterial vine disease. Full Article Science
ani Morocco: let us break the rod of repression with organisation and struggle By www.marxist.com Published On :: Tue, 07 Jan 2020 11:59:40 +0000 Those who follow the situation in Morocco can see that the repressive dictatorial regime has become more and more frenzied, and the police state has tightened its repressive grip on everyone and everything. They are arresting those who protest, who sing, who criticise, who write, and who show solidarity with those arrested. Full Article Morocco
ani US Wildlife Services killed 1.3 million non-invasive animals in 2017 By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 06 Jul 2018 12:57:50 -0400 From foxes and falcons to otters and owls, the USDA program is doing away with wildlife in droves. Full Article Science
ani Lazivores unite: A manifesto for lazy gardening By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 20 May 2019 17:58:20 -0400 It's time that the lazy gardeners among us rise up and take an explicit stand. Full Article Living
ani Over 200 Animals Rescued From Wildlife Traffickers in Thailand By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 08 Mar 2012 20:15:56 -0500 Among the hundreds of animals seized were 5 tigers, 13 white lions, three pumas, three kangaroos, four flamingos, two crowned cranes, 66 marmosets, two orangutans, and two red pandas. Full Article Science
ani Sydney micro-apartment designed with Japanese organizational technique in mind By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 11 May 2017 14:59:48 -0400 Decluttering techniques are a big trend now. This small apartment is designed with organizational principles right from the start. Full Article Design
ani California Paves the Way for Lower-VOC Cleaning Products to Reduce Smog By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 23 Nov 2010 09:14:53 -0500 Household cleaning products in the U.S. might soon be a little greener, thanks to a new rule in California that will require companies to reformulate products so they contain fewer volatile organic compounds, or Full Article Business
ani Recycle Old Furs Into Bedding for Injured Animals By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Sat, 23 Oct 2010 06:34:54 -0400 With a slew of fur-free celebrities and PETA's racy anti-fur campaigns, sporting a fur coat is controversial. For reasons that range from the philosophical to the stylistic, Planet Green notes, thousands of old fur coats are sitting Full Article Living
ani Chanel ditches furs and animal skins By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 06 Dec 2018 11:42:00 -0500 No more crocodile skin handbags. Chanel is going cruelty-free in all future collections. Full Article Living
ani An urbanist's question: Where is the best place to have a parade? By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 17 Jun 2019 09:07:49 -0400 Do you plan it where there is lots of room, or do you put it where there is good transit accessibility? Full Article Design
ani If you're buying a Thanksgiving turkey, choose organic By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 14 Nov 2018 12:32:00 -0500 Help stop the rise of antibiotic resistance by buying a bird that's been raised drug-free. Full Article Living
ani 6 Animals With More Social Media Fans, Friends, and Followers Than You By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 18 May 2011 08:00:55 -0400 Who says you have to be human to be a popular user on Facebook and Twitter? These six animals have more friends, fans, and followers than most people. Full Article Living
ani The shocking truth about organic vs conventional packaged foods By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Mar 2019 09:50:22 -0500 An estimated 2,000 synthetic chemicals can be used in conventional packaged foods; for organic the number is 40. Full Article Living
ani Use cold water in your cleaning machines By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 04 Jun 2019 07:00:00 -0400 Whether it's laundry or dishes, turn down the dial for environmental savings and gleaming results. Full Article Living
ani Organic gardening helps inmates kick drug addiction By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 03 Jul 2019 09:02:00 -0400 Physically and mentally, growing plants without chemicals has a transformative effect. Full Article Living
ani For These 5 Animals, War is Actually a Good Thing By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 12 May 2010 11:00:10 -0400 On first reflection it would seem that living in a war zone is rough, no matter your species. When armed conflicts erupt we are too often overwhelmed by the numbers of humans injured and killed. How animals are affected Full Article Science
ani Climate Change Affecting Pakistani Power Supplies By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 14 Mar 2008 09:12:39 -0400 Basically, Pakistan's hydroelectric reservoirs are drying up. Several are reported to be at "dead level," which means the turbines can only use run-of-the-river flows, and have lower output as a result. Because natural gas supplies are also low, Full Article Business
ani Pentagon 'Discovers' Huge Lithium Deposit in Afganistan By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Sun, 13 Jun 2010 22:24:48 -0400 From the "re-positioning of old news' file: as quoted in the New York Times story about a trillion dollar minerals discovery in Afganistan, U.S. Full Article Business
ani Pakistani Soldier Plants 20,101 Trees in One Day! Sets New World Record By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Sep 2010 11:40:00 -0400 Let that sink in for a second: Over a period of 18 hours and 40 minutes on September 29th, Muhammed Yousuf Jamil, a Lance Naik (Lance Corporal) in the Pakistani Army singlehandedly Full Article Living
ani Pakistani Timber Mafia & Climate Change Caused Much of Summer's Flooding By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Oct 2010 15:05:00 -0400 Back when 20% of Pakistan was underwater, I wrote about the influence of deforestation on the flooding--deforestation caused in no small part by illegal logging at the hands of the so-called timber mafia, a group with Full Article Business
ani Animals Taunted and Confined at Bahawlpur Zoo (Video) By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 08 Mar 2011 09:56:29 -0500 PETA and I may disagree about the ethics of eating meat, and there are plenty of people who object to PETA's overly sexualized campaign tactics. Nevertheless, I have always felt they are one of the more effective campaign Full Article Science
ani Pakistani Villagers Set World Record For Tree-Hugging By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 15 Jun 2012 14:03:55 -0400 In a recent show of solidarity with the forests and one another, more than a thousand villagers gathered to simultaneously give their beloved trees a loving squeeze. Full Article Living
ani Do Well in School, Get a Solar Panel, Pakistani Students Told By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 23 Oct 2012 16:24:00 -0400 $46 million is going to give students who do well their own solar power. Full Article Energy
ani Are We Running Out of Uranium? Let's Hope So By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 27 Nov 2009 07:14:38 -0500 Can a nuclear weary TreeHugger really believe what she's hearing? Could uranium mines be facing shortages? Earlier this Full Article Energy
ani The Week in Animal News: Miracle Pando Poo Tea, Another Rhino Species Officially Extinct, and More By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 18 Nov 2011 07:13:45 -0500 Can panda poo prevent cancer? We also have sad rhino news, fish lawnmowers, and more. Full Article Science
ani 8 companies that sell high quality fair trade and organic teas By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 09 Mar 2016 08:00:00 -0500 Craving the perfect cup of tea on a chilly morning? Here are some companies with ethical business practices worth supporting. Full Article Living
ani Artist's blossoming animal forms depict triumph of life over death By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Sat, 30 Sep 2017 19:43:29 -0400 These flowery sculptures seem to grow and flourish, out of repurposed dead animal skulls. Full Article Living