Background on the News - 2005-12-28

If you have trouble reading this e-mail, please go to http://www.foreignaffairs.org/e_newsltr/current.html







 


published by the Council on Foreign Relations



You're reading the newsletter of Foreign Affairs magazine. See About This Newsletter (below) for information about your subscription. The Background on the News feature of www.foreignaffairs.org makes available the full text of past essays that are relevant today, plus occasional postscripts newly written by the authors.


December 28, 2005

 WEB EXCLUSIVE 

No Joke









Earlier this month, the government of Kazakhstan removed a British comedian's Web site hosted on the country's .kz domain claiming that the comic's material was derogatory to the Kazakh people. The move gave credence to the U.S. government's reluctance to give up control of the Internet's domain name system to the United Nations, which The Economist's Kenneth Neil Cukier described in a recent Foreign Affairs article about the history of Internet governance. In a new postscript, Cukier explains why the Kazakh government's action highlights the danger of entrusting Internet management to an international body: such a transfer could help governments that repress speech at home do so online.


In the Current Issue of Foreign Affairs

The complete text of selected essays and of all the book reviews from the January/February issue can be found on the Foreign Affairs Web site. Currently the following essays are available in their full text:

 

Women, Islam, and the New Iraq

Isobel Coleman

Although questions of implementation remain, the new Iraqi constitution makes Islam the law of the land. This need not mean trouble for Iraq's women, however. Sharia is open to a wide range of interpretations, some quite egalitarian. If Washington still hopes for a liberal order in Iraq, it should start working with progressive Muslim scholars to advance women's rights through religious channels.

 

A Natural History of Peace

Robert M. Sapolsky

Humans like to think that they are unique, but the study of other primates has called into question the exceptionalism of our species. So what does primatology have to say about war and peace? Contrary to what was believed just a few decades ago, humans are not "killer apes" destined for violent conflict, but can make their own history.

 

Furthering Democracy in Mexico

Enrique Krauze

As it approaches its first presidential election in the post-PRI era, Mexico is at a crossroads: it could either consolidate democracy and proceed with needed reforms or fall back into a familiar state of crisis. Which way it goes will depend above all on the candidates of the three major political parties, who must rise above their short-term interests to further the nation's progress toward democratic stability.

 

Advertisement


Fluor — Expanding the Fight Against Corruption

Fluor: Expanding the Fight Against CorruptionCorruption is one of the greatest obstacles to economic growth, and major corporations have the capability and responsibility to facilitate global economic growth, especially in developing nations, by addressing tough, macroeconomic challenges. Thus, Fluor Corporation, working with other business, political and intellectual leaders in the World Economic Forum is working to minimize the barriers that inhibit such progress.

For more information click here.

For more information on Fluor go to www.fluor.com.

For information on the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting go to www.weforum.org.



Previously in Background on the News


 

Survivor
November 23, 2005
With the historic withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza under his belt, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon made another bold move this week: he announced that he will quit the conservative Likud party he helped found to start a new, centrist party and called for the dissolution of Knesset to precipitate general elections ahead of schedule. . . . Read more

 

Burning Down the House
November 9, 2005
The riots of disaffected Muslim youth in France stem from domestic socioeconomic divisions rather than a global clash of civilizations, and thus have more in common with the periodic eruptions in South Central Los Angeles than the recent subway bombings in London. That said, the difficulties Muslim immigrants and their descendants have encountered in making their way into the mainstream of European society have contributed to a generalized discontent that finds expression in many forms, the terrorism of a radical fringe among them. . . . Read more

 

Fischer Hooked
October 26, 2005
Germany's recent elections have resulted in a changing of the political guard in Berlin, with one of the casualties being the charismatic foreign minister Joschka Fischer. . . . Read more

 

Stay on Top of International Affairs with the Council's "The World This Week" Weekly Email Newsletter


To sign up for the newsletter, visit http://www.cfr.org/media and input your email address into "The World This Week" box.

Visit cfr.org.

 

Back to top.

 


  • Instant access to the current issue and an entire year of back issues online
  • 50% discount on article purchases in our digital archive
  • Improved account management

SIGN UP TODAY!

 

Foreign Affairs
Bestsellers
for 2005

The topselling books on international affairs based on national sales at Barnes & Noble stores and barnesandnoble.com during 2005.

  1. The World Is Flat
    Thomas L. Friedman
  2. Collapse
    Jared Diamond
  3. China, Inc.
    Ted C. Fishman

Complete list

The Year in Books

Lucian W. Pye / Asia

Each month a member of our panel of book reviewers recommends the best books discussed in Foreign Affairs in the past year. For December 2005, Lucian W. Pye gives his picks for the best books on Asia and the Pacific.. Read

Most Popular Article Reprints

Purchased online at foreignaffairs.org during November 2005

1. China's Global Hunt for Energy by David Zweig and Bi Jianhai (September/October 2005)

2. China's "Peaceful Rise" to Great-Power Status by Zheng Bijian (September/October 2005)

3. The End of Europe? by Laurent Cohen-Tanugi (November/December 2005)

4. Somebody Else's Civil War by Michael Scott Doran (January/February 2002)

5. Fighting the War of Ideas by Zeyno Baran (November/December 2005)

6. Taming American Power by Stephen M. Walt (September/October 2005)

7. Understanding China by Kishore Mahbubani (September/October 2005)

8. The Limits of Intelligence Reform by Helen Fessenden (November/December 2005)

9. America's Imperial Ambition by G. John Ikenberry (September/October 2002)

10. The Decline of America's Soft Power by Joseph S. Nye, Jr. (May/June 2004)

 

You've received this email because you subscribed to the HTML version of the biweekly Foreign Affairs email newsletter.

Use the following links to manage your subscription:

Foreign Affairs and the Council on Foreign Relations are located at:

58 East 68th Street
New York, NY 10065

Copyright 2005 by the Council on Foreign Relations, Inc. All rights reserved

ø