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February 10th, 2012

Shin suggests balance, few changes as Lee's term ends

Shorenstein APARC, KSP in the news: Korea Times on February 8, 2012

With less than a year before South Korean President Lee Myung-bak's term ends, Gi-Wook Shin says that Lee should maintain his current North Korea policy, and keep balanced relations with growing trade partner China and long-time ally the United States. Shin spoke recently with the Korea Times about Lee's final months in office.




February 9th, 2012

Negotiating Assad's final exit

CDDRL, FSI Stanford Op-ed

In an article for The New Republic's online symposium 'What Should the United States Do About Syria,' Larry Diamond argues that multilateral engagement is the best approach to depose President Bashar al-Assad. Read more »



February 8th, 2012

ARD scholar Elias Muhanna nominated for Next Century Foundation award

CDDRL, ARD News

The Program on Arab Reform and Democracy scholar Elias Muhanna, the blogger behind qifanabki.com, was nominated for a special award for an outstanding contribution to new media by the Next Century Foundation. Read more »



February 6th, 2012

Q&A: Stanford’s Cuéllar and US diplomat on human rights and the Internet

CISAC, FSI Stanford News

U.S. Ambassador Eileen Donahoe recently brought fellow diplomats to Stanford to meet with scholars, human rights activists, and Silicon Valley leaders to address questions engendered by a free and open Internet. She joins CISAC’s Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar for a discussion about the potential and challenges facing the online frontier. Read more »



February 4th, 2012

Are the days of web surfing over?

CDDRL, Program on Liberation Technology Op-ed

In an opinion piece for The New York Times on Feb. 4, Evgeny Morozov declares the days of cyberspace exploration over, snuffed out by the world of social media and search engine optimization. Read more »



February 2nd, 2012

Indonesian campaign poster symbolism and political identity

Shorenstein APARC, SEAF News

Riding around on the back of a motorcycle in 2009, Jeremy Menchik snapped photos of hundreds of Indonesian campaign posters. That number has now grown to over 5000 images, which Menchik and Colm Fox have painstakingly coded and analyzed. The initial results of their research reveal similarities between the United States and Indonesia, and shed light on the transitional democracies of the Arab Spring. Read more »


Taubman discusses unlikely effort to rid the world of nuclear weapons

CISAC, FSI Stanford News

In a new book, former New York Times reporter Philip Taubman, a consulting professor at the Center for International Security and Cooperation, tells the story of five men who have joined efforts to eliminate the ultimate weapon.



Make Parliament bigger, says popular blogger Elias Muhanna

CDDRL, ARD in the news: The Daily Star on February 2, 2012

Arab Reform and Democracy scholar Elias Muhanna spoke with The Daily Star, a Beirut-based newspaper, about the idea of introducing a bicameral legislature to Lebanon. Muhanna commented on what this would mean for the political system at large and how far it would go in repairing the deep governance issues that have divided the Lebanese polity for decades. Read more »



February 1st, 2012

Stanford democracy experts examine Asia, Middle East

CDDRL, FSI Stanford in the news

CDDRL scholars Larry Diamond, Francis Fukuyama, and Ahmed Benchemsi published articles in the January issue of the Journal of Democracy examining the state of democratic development in two pivotal regions – Asia and the Middle East. Read more »


New Asia Pacific Observatory represents unique regional partnership

Shorenstein APARC, AHPP News

The Asia Pacific Observatory of Health Systems and Policies is a new regional initiative to promote evidence-based health policymaking in the Asia-Pacific region. The Observatory represents a unique partnership of governments, development agencies, and the research community working together. Read more »


The Europe Center announces publication of new Nelly Sachs biography

FSI Stanford, The Europe Center News

The richly illustrated Nelly Sachs: Flight and Metamorphosis marks the first time that the biography of Nelly Sachs has been made available in English. Read more »



January 31st, 2012

Shin and Stanford's Korean Studies Program

Shorenstein APARC, KSP in the news: Stanford Daily on January 31, 2012

Gi-Wook Shin, founding director of Stanford's Korean Studies Program (KSP), spoke with the Stanford Daily about creating a unique niche for KSP over the past 11 years, and about being a student during an era of change in Korea.



Trafficking victim turns personal story into powerful force for advocacy

CDDRL, PHR News

Roni Hong, a human trafficking survivor and founder of the Tronie Foundation presented her testimony at the third installment of the Sanela Diana Jenkins International Speaker Series. Read more »



January 30th, 2012

Signs of growth in post-Fukushima Japan, say Stanford experts

Shorenstein APARC, Japan Studies Program News

Nearly a year has passed since an earthquake triggered a tsunami that swept away entire communities on Japan's northeastern coast, leading to a series of accidents at the Fukushima nuclear complex. Masahiko Aoki and Kenji Kushida discuss post-March 11 developments, and a related conference at Stanford scheduled for February 27. Read more »


Katsunori Hirano envisions a sustainable future

Shorenstein APARC, Shorenstein APARC Corporate Affiliates News

South of Mount Fuji, along Japan’s central eastern coast, sits Shizuoka Prefecture. Home to green tea plantations, hot springs resorts, and Yamaha pianos and motorcycles, Shizuoka Prefecture is a vibrant agricultural, tourist, and manufacturing region. It is also home to Katsunori Hirano, a current Corporate Affiliates Visiting Fellow at the Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center. Read more »



January 25th, 2012

Now accepting Developing Asia Health Policy Fellowship applications

Shorenstein APARC, AHPP Announcement

The Asia Health Policy Program offers the opportunity for leading health policy experts from low-income Asian countries to come to Stanford as visiting fellows for three to nine months between Sept. 1, 2012 and Aug. 31, 2013. Applications accepted until Mar. 5, 2012.




January 24th, 2012

Aoki suggests a new approach to Japan's power industry

Shorenstein APARC, Japan Studies Program in the news: Asia Pathways on January 12, 2012

As the one-year anniversary of Japan's Great Tohoku Earthquake and Fukushima nuclear disaster approaches, Stanford economist Masahiko Aoki says now is an opportune time to restructure the country's electric power industry.



Madeline Rees speaks out against human trafficking abuses within the UN system

CDDRL, PHR News

Madeline Rees, former U.N. high commissioner for human rights in Bosnia and secretary general for the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom spoke at the second installment of the Sanela Diana Jenkins International Speaker Series on human rights abuse during peacekeeping operations and how to improve accountability. Read more »



January 23rd, 2012

Stanford scholars reflect on Arab Spring

CDDRL, FSI Stanford, ARD News

A year after the Egyptian uprising, five scholars talk about democracy in the Middle East, how lives have changed in the Arab world, and what the U.S. has learned from the Arab Spring. Read more »



January 19th, 2012

Poverty and Governance program launches policy brief series

CDDRL, Program on Poverty and Governance Announcement

The Program on Poverty and Governance at Stanford University's Center on Democracy, Development and Rule of Law is proud to announce the launch of its inaugural policy brief series. Read more »


Center offers Stanford students Asia-related learning

Shorenstein APARC Announcement

What does China's growth mean for the international system? How does Korea interact with its key neighbors? What do healthcare systems look like in East Asia? During the winter quarter, Stanford students have the opportunity to explore such timely and globally relevant Asia-focused questions through Shorenstein APARC expert-taught courses.




January 18th, 2012

Small farmers can make the most of Africa's land

FSE, FSI Stanford News

Improve smallholder productivity and put idle cropland to work, say international development experts Read more »


Kohrman to speak about cigarette factory mapping and policy

Shorenstein APARC, SCP Announcement

At present, the tobacco industry annually produces some six trillion cigarettes worldwide. A third of all these sticks were produced in China last year. During a Jan. 30 seminar, Matthew Kohrman will introduce the Cigarette Citadels project, an innovative application of participatory GIS, and discuss its implications for public health policy and social theory about the state and the politics of life.



Stanford's Fingar examines China's development issues

Shorenstein APARC, CISAC, FSI Stanford, SCP in the news: YaleGlobal Online on January 18, 2012

For the past two decades China has been a poster child of successful globalization. But its integration into the world economy and global trends drive and constrain Beijing's ability to manage growing social, economic and political challenges. In a YaleGlobal Online series article, Thomas Fingar looks at the global implications of China’s development challenges.



Corporate Affiliates alumnus' research in China's energy sector

Shorenstein APARC, Shorenstein APARC Corporate Affiliates News

China possesses vast coal reserves, and coal accounts for 70 percent of the country's total energy consumption -- 3 billion tons per year. But China also consumes oil, natural gas, and an increasing amount of renewable energy. Xuteng Hu, a Corporate Affiliates Visiting Fellow Program alumnus (2007-08), discusses the energy and materials development projects he manages at PetroChina’s Petrochemical Research Institute in Beijing. Read more »



« News Archive (page 1)




News around the web

Junk foods still plentiful at elementary schools
Junk food remains plentiful at the nation's elementary schools despite widespread efforts to curb childhood obesity, a new study suggests. Dr. Thomas Robinson, a Stanford University pediatrician and obesity prevention researcher, called the study results "sobering". The study appears in Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, released Monday. Robinson wrote an accompanying editorial.
Mention of Thomas N. Robinson in msnbc.com on February 6, 2012

As Chinese courts announce 'guiding cases,' Stanford Law School helps to spread the word
A Stanford website translates important rulings by the Supreme People's Court that serve as guides for lower courts, helping the vast country to move toward more consistent judicial decisions.
Mention of Erik Jensen in Stanford University News on February 6, 2012

Retirement in an Era of Long Life
Laura L. Carstensen: "It seems that national discussions about retirement quickly turn to the long-term viability of Social Security. The problem with retiring in the early 60s isn't just a problem for Social Security. It's much bigger. We are squandering the opportunity to redesign life."
Mention of Laura L. Carstensen in TheStreet.com on February 6, 2012

Interview with Francis Fukuyama: "Where Is the Uprising from the Left?"
In a SPIEGEL interview, the author of "The End of History" explains why he now believes that the excesses of capitalism are a threat to democracy and asks why there is no "Tea Party on the left."
Mention of Francis Fukuyama in Spiegel Online on February 1, 2012

What is Governance?
Francis Fukuyama: "I’m beginning a new project at Stanford/CDDRL called 'The Governance Project.' The intention is to focus on conceptualizing and measuring governance, and applying those measures to two specific countries, China and the United States."
Mention of Francis Fukuyama in The American Interest (blog) on January 31, 2012

Research shows climate change may shrink wheat crops
Professor David Lobell from Stanford University used nine years worth of satellite images to observe when Indian wheat crops turned brown, that is when they stopped growing. He looked at what happened when temperatures exceeded 34 degrees Celsius; ...
Mention of David Lobell in ABC Online on January 30, 2012

Warning: This Site Contains Conspiracy Theories
Evgeny Morozov: "Does Google have a responsibility to help stop the spread of 9/11 denialism, anti-vaccine activism, and other fringe beliefs?"
Mention of Evgeny Morozov in Slate Magazine (blog) on January 30, 2012

Wheat will age prematurely in a warmer world
David Lobell of Stanford University in California used nine years of images from the MODIS Earth-observation satellite to track when wheat in this region turned from green to brown, a sign that the grain is no longer growing.
Mention of David Lobell in New Scientist on January 29, 2012

The Dangers of Sharing
Evgeny Morozov reviews Lori Andrews', "I Know Who You Are and I Saw What You Did: Social Networks and the Death of Privacy."
Mention of Evgeny Morozov in New York Times on January 27, 2012

Do institutions really matter?
Francis Fukuyama: "... The questionable relevance of institutions is brought home by the controversy over Hungary’s new constitution, which went into effect on January 1, and which has caused a firestorm of criticism in the European parliament and elsewhere."
Mention of Francis Fukuyama in The American Interest (blog) on January 26, 2012

More news around the web »