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I accumulated quite a few links over the long weekend just past in Canada, Monday having been Canada Day. That volume will make for two [BLOG] posts today.

(Feedly, thankfully, seems to be working well.)


  • Bag News Notes compares coverage of the protests in Brazil and Turkey, arguing that although the photos from the two countries convey similar images of violence, in actual fact the Brazilian protests are encountering less violence and are getting substantially more response from the national government than their Turkish counterparts.

  • The Dragon's Tales notes a recent study suggesting that gas giants--heavy planets like Jupiter and Saturn, not their smaller ice giant kin like Uranus and Neptune--seem to form, on the relatively rare occasions they do form, close to their sun.

  • Daniel Drezner considers the ethics of institutions of higher education receiving very large grants from foreign governments. Does it compromise them and/or can it engage them with the wider world?

  • Eastern Approaches notes the likely dire consequences on press freedom in Ukraine of a gas magnate's purchase of Forbes' Ukrainian edition.
  • The Everyday Sociology Blog takes a look at what, if anything, the inability of Trayvon Martin witness Rachel Jeantel to read a handwritten note says about social capital.

  • Far Outliers' Joel describes the medieval Venetian empire, the stato da mar, at its peak.

  • At A Fistful of Euros, Edward Hugh makes the case that the Czech economy is bound for stagnation.

  • Geocurrents maps the regional and ethnic dimensions of the recent Iranian presidential election.

  • Joe. My. God. links to Nate Silver's chart showing the progression of same-sex marriage rights across the world, by population and by continent.

  • Language Hat examines the question of what exactly is Aranese (the Gascon Occitan dialect spoken in northwestern Catalonia, for starters).

  • New APPS Blog analyses a secular French feminism that is nonetheless anti-gay.

  • Progressive Download's John Farrell argues that Slovenia is caught in an unusually intense form of stagnation stemming from its managed transition from Communism.

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