Jun 16, 2011 18:49
German politics, Slovakia's geopolitics, regionalism and cities in India, racism in science, and the benefits of self-governance for islands and the Internet alike--all are linked to here.
- Daniel Drezner is very unimpressed with German chancellor Angela Merkel, whose leadership style he describes as dithering and then announcing sudden policy changes which do nothing for her politically.
- Eastern Approaches suggests that Slovakia's opposition to "easy" bailouts for indebted Eurozone countries like Greece, supported by popular opinion, is now becoming more accepted as Germany in particular hardens.
- Geocurrents takes a look at the northeastern Indian state of Tripura, after partition transformed by the mass immigration of Bengali Hindus into one conflict-ridden area on the eastern fringes of Bengal.
- The Global Sociology Blog reviews The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, a book that examines how immortal cancer cells were taken from the body of a dying African-American cotton farmer in the mid-20th century and the connection between science and racism.
- Lawyers, Guns and Money's Dave Brockington observes the continuing travails of Puerto Rico, caught in the current ambiguous status quo.
- Marginal Revolution's Alex Tabarrok seems altogether too impressed by the Indian city of Gurgoan, built and functioning well without government involvement, as a model for urban development more generally.
- Registan takes a look at the surprising conflict of the government of Kazakhtan with Google.
- The Yorkshire Ranter observes that the only British regions with rising incomes over the past few year are self-governing London, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, with self-governing Wales doing least bad of all the rest.
internet,
scotland,
germany,
eurozone,
bangladesh,
language conflict,
wales,
united states,
puerto rico,
kazakhstan,
united kingdom,
cities,
links,
central asia,
economics,
science,
slovakia,
european union,
south asia,
former soviet union,
india,
politics,
central europe,
regionalism,
ireland,
racism