[BLOG] Some Wednesday links

Feb 13, 2013 12:33

  • Crooked Timber's Maria Farrell writes about Ireland's Magdalen Laundries, institutions she sees as product of Irish misogyny and Roman Catholicism.
  • Daniel Drezner took note of the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI and argues that the main people arguing about a currency war are (among others) developing countries and a Bundesbank that doesn't want to lose power to the European Central Bank.
  • Eastern Approaches points out that cohabitation in Georgia between President Saakashvili and the governing opposition is not going well.
  • Far Outliers' Joel points out that the dialect of African-Americans in the Japanese translation of Gone With The Wind is that of the marginalized Tohoku region in northern Honshu, visited two years by disaster.
  • Geocurrents maps the results of a referendum on conscription in Austria, noting that the largely rural state of Burgenland--once part of Hungary, and still a frontier region--voted strongly in favour.
  • At Lawyers, Guns and Money, Dave Brockington notes that the American states with the longest voting lines tend to have Republican governments and relatively large African-American and Latino populations.
  • Progressived Download's John Farrell points out that private labs offering adult stem cell treatments very often inflict terrible, novel illnesses on their clients.
  • Registan's Mitchell Polman points out that Central Asia is hardly likely to prosper if foreign influence is seen as a zero-sum game. All kinds of powers need to take part.
  • Window on Eurasia quotes from a Russian Eurasianist thinker, Rustem Vakhitov, who argues that separatist tendencies in Russia overall are strongest in Russian regions. Why single out the ethnic republics and risk triggering something?
  • Zero Geography's Mark Graham maps Twitter usage in different African cities.

maps, germany, eurozone, democracy, south caucasus, africa, cities, links, popular literature, roman catholicism, regionalism, social networking, japan, feminism, medicine, globalization, united states, separatism, georgia, central asia, economics, science, federalism, japanese language, european union, former soviet union, gender, twitter, politics, geopolitics, christianity, russia, blogs, ireland, racism

Previous post Next post
Up