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Harvard International Review

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Running after a fallen Fox: the prelude to Mexico's 2006 presidential election.(PERSPECTIVES)(Vicente Fox)
While the US government fights an inconclusive war 6,200 miles away in Iraq, social controls continue to erode in Mexico, which shares a 2,000-mile-long border with the United States and whose . . .

Beyond yes and no: provincial autonomy and the future of Quebec.(PERSPECTIVES)
The nation of Quebec has been an established nation of the Americas for more than 470 years. It is the principal home for francophones on the continent. Before, and particularly since the birth of . . .

The advance of freedom: US foreign policy and democratic revolution.(PERSPECTIVES)(Column)
Forty-odd years ago I was providentially required to read R.R. Palmer's classic work, The Age of the Democratic Revolution. Palmer argued that the Western world in the last quarter of the 18th . . .

Dynamic Dubai: an oasis of growth.(MIDDLE EAST)
For some, the Middle East offers little of economic and political importance. They view the region with suspicion, seeing it as a breeding ground for terrorists due to radical fundamentalist Islam . . .

Costly sporting: Greece's post-Olympic woes.(EUROPE)
To the surprise of much of the world, Greece overcame construction delays, a July blackout in Athens, weak ticket sales, and infamous sweltering summer temperatures to put on a fun and secure show . . .

Putin power: Russia's ruler entrenches.(ASIA PACIFIC)(Vladimir Putin)
Following the deaths of hundreds of Russians during a school siege in the city of Beslan, Russian President Vladimir Putin unveiled on September 20, 2002, two major political reforms ostensibly . . .

2008 Olympics: dragon in the limelight.(ASIA PACIFIC)
When Beijing won the bid for the 2008 Olympics in 2001, thousands of Chinese citizens flooded Tiananmen Square in celebration of the momentous event. Unlike most people around the world, the . . .

Sanctioned state: the US embargo on Cuba.(AMERICAS)
Cuba may be just 90 miles off the coast of Florida, but it is a world away politically from the United States. The United States has imposed its infamous embargo on the nearby Communist . . .

No end in sight: female mutilation unabated.(AFRICA)
Progress on the elimination of female genital mutilation (FGM) in Africa has come to a halt as the Protocol on the Rights of Women in Africa remains 12 votes from ratification in the African Union . . .

Killer corrections: AIDS in South African Prisons.(AFRICA)
South Africa has acknowledged that it has a serious HIV/AIDS problem. The country has the largest number of HIV-positive people in the world, and the number will likely keep rising. After huge . . .

Professor Louis Klarevas.(Correction Notice)
In the Fall 2004 issue, the affiliation of Professor Louis Klarevas should have appeared as CUNY-College of Staten Island. In his piece "Political Realism" which appeared in the Perspectives . . .

Detecting danger.(CORRESPONDENCE)
In a prescient Foreign Affairs article published in 1961, Fred Charles Ikle succinctly asked, "After Detection--What?" In doing so, Ikle, who would soon be appointed to the directorship of the US . . .

Maintaining NATO.(CORRESPONDENCE)(North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
NATO was fortunate to have two particularly gifted Secretaries General at moments of historic change for the international community. At the end of the Cold War the German Manfred Woerner . . .

Averting nuclear catastrophe: contemplating extreme responses to US vulnerability.(ENDPAPER)
The United States dominates the international scene like no other state. Indeed, the modern state system has never seen a comparable global power. Despite its enormous economic, political, and . . .

Seeing the world scientifically: Ewan Harrison reviews The Power of International Theory.(Book Review)
Since its rise in prominence after the First World War, the discipline of international relations theory has sought to use scientific analysis to enlighten foreign policy. This aspiration has been . . .

A less dangerous place; Munis D. Faruqui reviews Alive and Well in Pakistan: A Human Journey in a Dangerous Time.(Book Review)
Curiously, the story of Alive and Well in Pakistan does not begin in Pakistan. Its starting point is mid-1990s Kashmir and an attempt by the author to retrace V.S. Naipaul's steps in the same . . .

Achieving international justice: human rights promotion and the law.(AN INTERVIEW WITH BERTRAND RAMCHARAN)(Interview)
Do universal human rights exist, and if so is it necessary to justify them philosophically? [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] There are, without a doubt, universal human rights. The 1948 Universal . . .

The perfect storm: OPEC and the world oil market.(fuel for thought: ENERGY)
Oil continues to be the world's most important fuel, contributing 39 percent of the global energy supply. It will remain the leading fuel in the near future, driven primarily by demand from . . .

Burning up: energy usage and the environment.(fuel for thought: ENERGY)
The use of energy by humankind has been an essential element in both the development of organized society and in the supply of food and physical comfort. Energy requirements were relatively modest . . .

Business as usual: the Saudi-US relationship.(fuel for thought: ENERGY)
The Saudi-US relationship has consistently been described as an exchange of oil for security. However, since 1944, when US President Franklin Roosevelt and King Abdel Aziz met in Egypt, Saudi . . .

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