Missing Links: Columns on the Surprises of Globalization
By Moisés Naím, Editor and Publisher of Foreign Policy
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Missing Links: Wasted
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May/June 2009 |
The American prohibition on thinking smart in the drug war. |
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Missing Links: An Intellectual Bailout
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January/February 2009 |
We must add another profession to the list of those in need of rescuing—economics itself. |
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Missing Links: After the Fall
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November/December 2008 |
What the lessons of 9/11 could teach the world about the financial crisis. |
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Missing Links: The Hypocrisy Audit
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September/October 2008 |
Double standards have always been a part of U.S. foreign policy. It’s time to figure out how many should no longer be tolerated. |
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The Global Food Fight
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July/August 2008 |
There are many culprits we can blame for higher food prices.
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The Coming Euroinvasion
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May/June 2008 |
First they came for the iPods. Then the Europeans snatched up condos in Manhattan. Now they’re coming for the companies.
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Can the World Afford A Middle Class?
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March/April 2008 |
Yes, but it will be awfully expensive.
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Hungry for America
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January/February 2008 |
After seven long years, the world is ready—and waiting—for the return of the United States.
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The Battle of Beijing
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November/December 2007 |
What happens when an authoritarian government and thousands of activists go head-to-head at the Olympics? China is about to find out.
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The Free-Trade Paradox
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September/October 2007 |
Why is trade booming while trade talks are crashing? |
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The Hidden Pandemic
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July/August 2007 |
How crime is quietly becoming a global killer. |
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What Is a Gongo?
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May/June 2007 |
How government-sponsored groups masquerade as civil society. |
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Rogue Aid
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March/April 2007 |
What’s wrong with the foreign aid programs of China, Venezuela, and Saudi Arabia? They are enormously generous. And they are toxic. |
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The YouTube Effect
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January/February 2007 |
How a technology for teenagers became a force for political and economic change. |
| Megaplayers Vs. Micropowers |
July/August 2006 |
Rising instability is good news for the little guy—and bad news for everyone else.
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| Our Inequality Anxiety |
May/June 2006 |
Economic disparities have not changed. Our tolerance for them has.
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| Economist Class |
March/April 2006 |
Economists must stop boasting about their superiority and start taking some risks.
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| The Most Dangerous Deficit |
January/February 2006 |
Why the supply and demand for global public goods could kill you. |
| It’s the Illicit Economy, Stupid |
November/December 2005 |
How Big Business taught criminals to go global. |
| Dangerously Unique |
September/October 2005 |
Why our definition of “normalcy” can be costly for everyone else. |
| The Bad Boys of Global Politics |
July/August 2005 |
John Bolton and Robert Mugabe might be the two best things to ever happen to the United Nations. |
| Arabs in Foreign Lands |
May/June 2005 |
What the success of Arab Americans tells us about Europe, the Middle East, and the power of culture. |
| Bad Medicine |
March/April 2005 |
The war on corruption is leaving the world worse than we found it. |
| Three Wise Men |
January/February 2005 |
What China's leaders can learn from Confucius, Mao, and Stanley Fischer. |
| Devour and Conquer |
November/December 2004 |
How the White House got its termite problem. |
| Casualties of War |
September/October 2004 |
The ideas that died in Iraq. |
| Bush's Willing Enablers |
July/August 2004 |
Who outside the administration of President George W. Bush deserves blame for the turmoil in Iraq? The list is long. |
| Meet George W. Kerry |
May/June 2004 |
Senator John Kerry's foreign policy will emulate President George W. Bush's—and vice versa. |
| From Normalcy to Lunacy |
March/April 2004 |
New Latin American political groups are embracing the politics of rage, race, and revenge |
| Russia's Oily Future |
January/Febuary 2004 |
Overcoming geology, not ideology, will prove Moscow's greatest challenge. |
| An Indigenous World |
November/December 2003 |
How native peoples can turn globalization to their advantage. |
| Berlusconi Goes to China |
September/October 2003 |
How Italy's prime minister can remake his image—and revolutionize Italian industries in the process
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| Cheap Dollar Diplomacy |
July/August 2003 |
Worries about U.S.-European estrangement overlook the real threat: the falling value of the U.S. dollar.
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The Perils of Lite Anti-Americanism
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May/June 2003 |
Why knee-jerk criticism of the United States carries dangerous hidden costs.
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| A Venezuelan Paradox |
March/April 2003 |
How Latin America's sole remaining dictator outsmarted the world's sole remaining superpower.
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| Saving Latin America |
November/December 2002 |
President Bush has a chance to make hemispheric history. And if he doesn't take it, the United States will be among the worst losers.
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Post-Terror Surprises  |
September/October 2002 |
One consequence of September 11 is the emergence of a more sophisticated understanding of globalization.
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| The New Diaspora |
July/August 2002 |
New links between émigrés and their home countries can become a powerful force for economic development.
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| Missing in Monterrey |
May/June 2002 |
The world’s political leaders recently gathered to rethink development assistance. But they forgot to discuss a few key items.
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Al Qaeda, the NGO
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March/April 2002 |
Can floundering political parties learn a few lessons from al Qaeda?
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Anti-Americanisms
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January/February 2002 |
Not all America-haters are created equal.
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Collateral Damage
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November/December 2001 |
The casualties of September's attacks include not only people but ideas.
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Advice for Anarchists
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September/October 2001 |
Who's blocking globalization, the protesters or summiteers?
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| Confidence Game |
May/June 2001 |
The economic crises of the 1990s suggest that the cure for America's economic doldrums may be as ineffable as their cause.
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| When Countries Go Crazy |
March/April 2001 |
Will President George W. Bush be smart enough to learn from experience and save taxpayer money in the process?
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| New Economy, Old Politics |
January/February 2001 |
High-tech companies may not yet realize it, but their success depends on the slow, lumbering process of multilateral diplomacy.
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| A Tale of Three Criminals |
November/December 2000 |
Repressive governments no longer need secret police to silence their opponents. Sometimes, a good accountant is enough.
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| The Digital Drain |
September/October 2000 |
Unable to match private sector salaries, governments are turning into the have-nots of the information age.
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| Other FOREIGN POLICY Articles by Moisés Naím |
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Caught In The Wrong Net
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Newsweek International, March 22, 2008 |
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Could Ugly Betty Be Getting Prettier?
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Washington Post, March 23, 2008 |
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Hugo Chávez's criminal paradise
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Los Angeles Times, November 10, 2007 |
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The Trade Paradox
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Washington Post, September 9, 2007 |
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Demise of a Metaphor: Why the Marshall Plan's success is not so easy to repeat
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Washington Post, November 4, 2007 |
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The Good Neighbor Strategy
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Time, July 9, 2006 |
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From the Vatican to Baghdad, the Little Guy is Calling the Shots
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Financial Times, June 13, 2006 |
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Abandon the Fight Against Equality
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Financial Times, April 16, 2006 |
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Downsized and Out
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Washington Post, April 16, 2006 |
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Borderline
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Washington Post, May 28, 2006 |
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The Incredible Shrinking Peso: A Review of And the Money Kept Rolling In (And Out)
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Washington Post Book World, May 8, 2005 |
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Culture is Not the Culprit in Arab Poverty
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Financial Times, May 4, 2005 |
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Tunnel Vision on Corruption
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Washington Post, February 20, 2005 |
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Globoquiz: Guess the Leader
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Newsweek International, January 2005 |
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Sad Hints of a Bloody Future
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Newsweek International, August 30, 2004 |
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America Must Not Stop Promoting Democracy
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Financial Times, August 3, 2004 |
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Don't Put Blame for Iraq on Bush Alone
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Financial Times, June 2, 2004 |
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End the Fund's Succession Fiasco
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Financial Times, March 4, 2004 |
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Indigenous Groups and Their Global Allies
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Financial Times, October 9, 2003 |
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Only a Miracle Can Save China
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Financial Times, September 15, 2003
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Lula Needs Lift from America
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Financial Times, June 19, 2003 |
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Hugo Chavez and the Limits of Democracy
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The New York Times, March 5, 2003 |
| Coping with Misguided Ideas in a Dangerous World |
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Financial Times, November 25, 2002 |
| The Danger of a Compliant Saddam |
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Financial Times, November 14, 2002 |
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Washington Consensus: A Damaged Brand
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Financial Times, October 28, 2002
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Roots of Corporate Corruption
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Financial Times, September 30, 2002
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Bush's Responsibility to Brazil
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Financial Times, September 2, 2002
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A Virulent New Strain of Crisis
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Financial Times, May 13, 2002
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Democracy Dictates Latin America's Future
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Financial Times, April 26, 2002
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The Creative Destruction of Enron
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Financial Times, March 30, 2002
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Lessons from the Recent Past
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Financial Times, December 28, 2001
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Why the World Loves to Hate America
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Financial Times, December 7, 2001
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Even a Hegemon Needs Friends
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Financial Times, September 13, 2001
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An Exercise in Futility
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Financial Times, August 6, 2001
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Looking South
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Time (Latin America), December 25, 2000
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New Economy, Old Politics
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Financial Times, December 22, 2000
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Talking Back to the Backlash
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Time (Canada), February 21, 2000
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Six Anxieties
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Worldlink, January/February 2000
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World Bank: Its Role, Governance and Organizational Culture
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Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, April 1994
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Manage the Politics
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South China Morning Post , May 23, 1999
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Mexico 1994: Anatomy of an Emerging-Market Crash (book)
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1998
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Corruption Eruption
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Brown Journal of World Affairs, Summer 1995
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| Paper Tigers and Minotaurs: The Politics of Venezuela's Economic Reforms (book) |
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1993
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