rfmcdonald (
rfmcdonald) wrote2013-03-05 03:33 pm
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Entry tags:
- alternate history,
- blogs,
- central asia,
- clash of ideologies,
- democracy,
- education,
- egypt,
- environment,
- european union,
- former soviet union,
- geoengineering,
- glbt issues,
- global warming,
- iraq,
- italy,
- japan,
- kazakhstan,
- links,
- maps,
- middle east,
- poland,
- politics,
- regionalism,
- russia,
- space travel,
- syria,
- united states,
- war
[BLOG] Some Tuesday links
- Over at the Burgh Diaspora, Jim Russell takes a look at Japan's system of higher education, with a proliferating number of institutions and faculties but collapsing numbers of students, and argues that financially viable higher education systems will need students beyond their immediate catchment area.
- Crooked Timber's Henry Farrell starts a discussion about post-democratic governments such as Italy's recent Monti government and elsewhere, and wonders what response there can be apart from an inchoate populism.
- The Dragon's Tales' Will Baird links to a paper suggesting that the greenhouse effect has been mitigated in the past decade by the sulfur dioxide from volcanic eruptions.
- At False Steps, Paul Drye contemplates the abortive joint ESA-Russia effort at an Ariane-launched spaceplane, the Kliper.
- Geocurrents' Martin Lewis notes, with some local distinctions, the contrast between a broadly secular and liberal minded core Egypt (Cairo and the upper delta) contrasted with a more conservative rest of the country.
- At The Power and the Money, Douglas Muir expects the Syrian civil war to continue for a good while yet.
- Towleroad reports on Lech Walesa's homophobic statements, denounced even by his own son.
- Understanding Society's Daniel Little sees reason for concern about the long-term effectiveness and academic credibility of the French university system.
- Window on Eurasia's Paul Goble notes, via others, the alienation of western Kazakhstan--rich in natural resources, more conservative, but subordinates--from the remainder of the country.
- Yorkshire Ranter Alexander Harrowell reminds his readers--proponents of the Iraq war, too--of the broad consensus in the United Kingdom against the 2003 invasion and its sequelae.