organisation > New School for Social Research
Result(s): 11 - 20 of about 31  < PREVIOUS   |  NEXT >
The label "savage" is often found in imperial contexts, in wars between Western powers and indigenous peoples.
If the anger against the anti-Islam video tells us anything, it's that extremism fuels extremism.
Afghans are killing Western troops because the US and NATO are in occupation of their country, writes Barkawi.
Tony Blair and Desmond Tutu share a vision of world politics as an epic struggle between good and evil, writes Barkawi.
A new Syrian nation can be born in the inferno of struggle, one that can overcome differences that appear unbridgeable.
Human rights organisations must start coping with reality: The victors write the laws and hold the trials.
Syrian troops will soon regard everyone outside their own units as potential enemies.
G4S' failure to meet its Olympics contract is about profits rather than a lack of recruits.
War is nihilistic: it resists any consistent meaning we try to find in it.
External events, such as 9/11, can rapidly change the political salience of race in the West - and this should worry us.
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Murder of Somali draws ire of foreign African nationals over rising xenophobic violence.
We look at the impact of increased sanctions against the Islamic Republic and ask who it really affects.
Tupamaros enforce rough justice in Venezuela's slums to support socialism, but critics say the group are violent thugs.
More than a decade ago the US launched a war against Afghanistan, but was it a justified battle?
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Two years since the start of the uprising, rebels and Assad's forces remain locked in conflict.
Extensive coverage of political unrest that spread from Istanbul to other areas.
Revelations over NSA spying are threatening president's European trip.
Some urbanites are returning to their rural roots to farm the land.
Kuwait's 'Bidoon' have been stripped of rights and treated as second-class citizens.
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