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Harvard International Review articles from September 2003

1,194 total articles

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<a href="http://www.highbeam.com/Harvard+International+Review/publications.aspx?date=200309" title="Articles and back issues from Harvard International Review">Harvard International Review articles</a>

Harvard International Review back issues from September 2003:

HIR: 25 years of leadership.(Harvard International Review)

Sep 22, 2003 ... The Harvard International Review has contributed to the world's debates on international affairs for a quarter of a century. Founded to promote academic exchange while informing the casual reader, the HIR's mission has only grown more urgent with the passing decades. In Adam Smith's era, ...

Democratic or legalistic legitimacy?(China)

Sep 22, 2003; ... Professor Wei Pan ("Crossing the River," Summer 2003) suggests China's next decade of reform will succeed or fail according to three choices: whether "reformists" or "conservatives" run the government, whether external powers (especially the United States) help or hinder China's political ...

In China, let the donor beware.(Correspondence)

Sep 22, 2003; ... China's HIV/AIDS epidemic is not yet the world's worst ("An Epidemic of Denial," Summer 2003). However, its most recent wave is definitely one of the most bizarre. Not since the Romanian episode in which newborns received HIV as a result of contaminated "therapeutic" mini-transfusions has ...

Royal crackdown: Saudi Arabia's September 11.(Middle East)

Sep 22, 2003; ... On the night of May 12, 2003, four explosions targeted at Westerners rocked the Saudi capital of Riyadh. In the months following these attacks, the ruling Al Saud family has demonstrated new levels of vigilance and self-scrutiny and some recognition of the serious economic and social ...

Dueling outlets: proliferation of the media in Iraq.(Middle East)

Sep 22, 2003; ... In the midst of continued guerilla warfare against coalition forces, escalating terrorist activity throughout the country, and shortages of even basic resources like electricity and water, there is at least one sign that US President George Bush's war in Iraq has had some positive impact ....

A river in Peril: the waters rise at three Gorges.(Asia Pacific)

Sep 22, 2003; ... Along the banks of China's longest river, the Yangtze, the water is rising. As the river floods, over a million villagers settled in the surrounding valley are being forced to relocate their homes hundreds, and sometimes thousands, of miles away. Yet this is not a natural occurrence, like ...

Shifting gears: courting capital in South Africa.(Africa)

Sep 22, 2003; ... The 1994 victory of Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress (ANC) marked an end to the legalized racism of apartheid, ushering in what was to be a golden era of democracy and economic prosperity. Yet rampant unemployment, growing crime, and medical crises have replaced the joy and ...

Divine injustice: Papal influence Italian politics.(Europe)

Sep 22, 2003; ... For a country that contains the seat of Roman Catholicism, Italy is decidedly un-Catholic in its politics. Despite the declaration of abortion as immoral by Pope Paul VI in 1968, abortion has been legal in Italy for 25 years; despite the Church's 2,000-year-old condemnation of divorce, 12 ...

Rebel republic: Russia's Chechen conundrum.(Europe)

Sep 22, 2003; ... On face, the referendum held in Chechnya on March 24, 2003, seems like a hopeful sign. By a broad margin--Russian election officials reported roughly 95 percent of voters in favor--Chechens approved a Kremlin-backed draft constitution that would make Chechnya permanently and immutably ...

Learning curve: Da Silva on the national scene.(Luis Inacio da Silva)

Sep 22, 2003; ... The 2002 elections were good to the left-wing Worker's Party (PT) in Brazil. The 57-year-old former metal worker, Luis Inacio da Silva, or Lula as he is more commonly called, was swept into office after almost a decade of unsuccessful attempts to rise to the country's highest public ...

Episode II: US ballistic missile defense.(Americas)

Sep 22, 2003; ... The 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty restricted US and Soviet development of missile defense systems. Based on the logic of mutually assured destruction and in an effort to curb the Cold War arms race, each country was allowed to deploy limited ground-based missile defense ...

Identity in crisis: Egyptian political identity in the face of globalization.(Perspectives)

Sep 22, 2003; ... National political identities reflect material interest and the exercise of power, hence they mirror the outcome of the clash of those interests and the capacity as well as the inclusiveness of governmental institutions. A coherent national political identity suggests the existence of a ...

Changing the mix: renewable energy and the continuing need for fossil fuels.(Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries)

Sep 22, 2003; ... OPEC cares passionately about world energy as a whole and not just about petroleum. I Cleaner, safer, and easier energy. Energy. for development. Energy that can enrich the lives of even the world's poorest communities. A key mandate of our Secretariat in Vienna, Austria, is to ...

New kids on the bloc: revisiting Kennan's containment in a pre-emptive world. (Perspectives.

Sep 22, 2003; ... The publication of the US National Security Strategy in September 2002 and the consequent embrace by US President George Bush's administration of its most divisive aspect, pre-emption, has instigated a fundamental shift in tactical thinking, force deployment, and resource mobilization for ...

On the offensive: assassination policy under international law.(World In Review)

Sep 22, 2003; ... Originally promulgated in the time of kings when wars of aggression were the sovereign's prerogative, international custom and later treaties prohibiting attacks on the leader arose from kings' mutual desire to protect themselves. In the post-League of Nations and UN Charter era, ...

A question of pride: leveraging human nature to build a better United Nations.(World In Review)

Sep 22, 2003; ... What problem facing the United Nations is as challenging as Cyprus, as intricate as the Middle East, and as erratic and unpredictable as El Nino? According to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, the answer is human resources management, a make-or-break issue that needs to be "at the heart of ...

Playstation2 detonation: controlling the threat of dual-use technologies.(World In Review)

Sep 22, 2003; ... The biblical prophesy promising peace to those who turn their swords to ploughshares seems remarkably optimistic in today's world of dual-use technologies (DUTs), commercial products designed for peaceful employment but potentially adaptable to military ends. The range of recognized DUTs ...

Who is at the helm? Leadership.(defining leadership)

Sep 22, 2003 ... Since the end of the Cold War, policy makers and scholars alike have struggled to characterize an international system in transition. Their challenge is to describe the nature of the driving forces that have changed world affairs--on both state and interstate levels--since 1989. Much of ...

In their own words: leaders speak out.(an interview with Today's Leaders)(James Wolfensohn)(Interview)

Sep 22, 2003 ... Introducing our symposium on leadership is a special collection of interviews with world leaders from a variety of fields, including economics, business, government, and international law. Though their expertise and perspectives are diverse, their example establishes one fact beyond ...

General strategies: how the United States makes war.(... Eliot Cohen explains America's defence doctrine)(Interview)

Sep 22, 2003 ... Recently you have written about the United States as a "reluctant warrior" in international affairs. Could you elaborate on your views about the unique nature of the US role in global affairs in the post-Cold War and post-September 11 era? You used the right word when you said ...

An empire in denial: the limits of US imperialism.(United States)

Sep 22, 2003; ... It used to be only foreigners and those on the fringes of US politics who referred to the "American Empire." Invariably, they did so in order to criticize the United States. Since the attack on the World Trade Center in September 2001, however, there has been a growing volume of more ...

The Cyprus crucible: the importance of good timing.

Sep 22, 2003; ... Turkish President Kemal Ataturk, a consummate leader, appreciated the importance of an acute sense of timing in pursuit of larger national objectives. Encouraged by chauvinists among his Turkish compatriots before he signed the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923 with France and Britain, Ataturk ...

Breach of trust: leadership in a market economy.

Sep 22, 2003; ... If leadership is about setting an example that others seek to emulate, who could argue with the proven track record of sustained economic success in the United States? During the boom years of the 1990s, it was hard find fault with the country's economic performance. With the stock markets ...

Moral leadership: beyond management and governance.

Sep 22, 2003; ... Perhaps at no other time in recent history has the question of leadership been so acutely relevant and so dramatically posed. The diplomatic struggle at the United Nations over the fate of Iraq, the decision by the United States and Britain to launch a war against Iraq after failing to ...

From the trenches: multilateralism in US military interventions.(An interview with Wesley Clark)(Interview)

Sep 22, 2003 ... WESLEY CLARK is former NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe and former Commander-in-Chief, US European Command. During your experience as commander-in-chief of the Allied Forces in the NATO operations in Kosovo, were there any structural hindrances to the allied campaign? How ...

Viable candidates: Michael Corgan reviews The Future of NATO Expansion.(North Atlantic Treaty Organization)

Sep 22, 2003; ... The split between the United States and "Old" Europe over Iraq has had reverberations far beyond the chambers of the UN Security Council. The clash had a divisive impact on relations between NATO and the European Union, as well as within the organizations themselves. As NATO evolves from ...

The cost of consumerism: David Deese reviews Democracy's Dilemma.(Book Review)

Sep 22, 2003; ... One of the most long-standing and important debates about globalization is whether it is fundamentally good or bad. Are the negative impacts of globalization balanced by the benefits, and what actions can national and international policy makers take to ensure that they are? In particular, ...

Most dangerous path: establishing the rule of law in Serbia.(Endpaper)

Sep 22, 2003; ... Ever since the perfidious assassination of Serbian Premier Zoran Djindjic, my fellow fighter in the battle for democratic change, I have pondered what went wrong. What could have been done, what should have been done, to thwart that awful tragedy? The problems facing Serbia cannot be ...