Foreign Policy Blogs

Women

Guantanamo "Fun" With Miss Universe

Guantanamo "Fun" With Miss Universe

It was April Fools’ Day, and so I naturally assumed that the good people at BBC were having a bit of fun when I read the headline “Guantanamo ‘fun’—Miss Universe”. As the BBC reported on the adventures of Miss Universe Dayana Mendoza, co-national of the always colorful and U.S.-bashing Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez: Ms Mendoza […]

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Follow Us on Twitter!

Follow Us on Twitter!

Yes, we have caved in and joined the latest social-networking fad. You can now follow Women and Foreign Policy on Twitter. Barack Obama does…or so Twitter says.

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Hillary's Crossover

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s arrival to Mexico this week came amidst a war of accusations between Mexican and U.S. government officials regarding drug trafficking violence at the border. Most contentious was the report by the U.S. Joint Forces Command which recommended the monitoring of Mexico as a “failing” state, one that could ultimately prove […]

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Mysterious Madoff and More in Moment Magazine

The cherry blossoms are in bloom in Washington, D.C., and I am especially cheery because the March/April issue of Moment Magazine is out on newsstands. There is a lot of good stuff in this one, and I hope that you will check it out. First, we tackle the whole Bernand Madoff mess. The former NASDAQ […]

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Q&A with Professor Deborah Cameron, author of The Myth of Mars and Venus

Among the speakers at this year’s Oxford University’s Radical Forum was Deborah Cameron, a professor of linguistics at Worcester College whose research interests include language, gender, the media and the interactions between them. She is also the author of The Myth of Mars and Venus: Do men and women really speak different languages? which succeeds […]

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Best of the Web: The Quotable Femmes Edition

Best of the Web: The Quotable Femmes Edition

“I would take the banana cream pie we are going to make a little later on. You can either feed it to him if he calms down or you can throw it at him.” –Domestic guru Martha Stewart coaches CNBC’s Jim Cramer on how to handle Jon Stewart before Cramer’s humiliating appearance on The Daily […]

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The Return of the Amateur

The Return of the Amateur

The 19th century liberal professions and the 20th century institutions which shelter them are currently groaning under the weight of huge populations, mass mobility, technological growth, black markets, crime, security issues, international trade and environmental and humanitarian disasters. From the local police station to the UN, the signs of strain are everywhere, not least in […]

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Happy International Women's Day!

Ladies, a very happy March 8th to you all! Gentlemen, I hope that you did not forget your flowers. The Christian Science Monitor marked the occasion with an awesome photo gallery. Enjoy.

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Best of the Web: Slumdog Millionaire Edition

Best of the Web: Slumdog Millionaire Edition

One man’s slum is another man’s home and recycling business. A photo essay in Foreign Policy takes a look at Mumbai’s Dharavi slum, where up to one million people live. Around 15,000 single-room factories and other entrepreneurial ventures result in an economic output of up to $1 billion in this settlement alone. Journalist Sudip Muzumdar, […]

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Sino-U.S. Relations: A Marriage of Convenience?

Sino-U.S. Relations: A Marriage of Convenience?

In his inaugural speech, President Barack Obama asserted that the United States remains “the most prosperous, powerful nation on earth.” No matter how powerful a nation is, however, its priorities still need to be rearranged and sometimes compromised, especially when dealing with key allies and partners. This much was evident by U.S. Secretary of State […]

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Thatcher revisited

Thatcher revisited

This week, BBC’s new movie examines the fall of Margaret Thatcher. Divisions within the Conservative Party regarding European integration as well as public backlash against Thatcher’s tax policies, which did not take income disparities into account, were the main reasons why Thatcher’s long reign as prime minister (1979-1990) finally ended. London’s Independent took the BBC […]

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How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

One of the ironies of Pax Americana is that it rests upon the nuclear bombing of Japan at the end of the Second World War. Yet this searing and incontrovertible statement of technological superiority, power and the will to use it has not been the final word on global security for some time. Nuclear weapons […]

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Mars, The Bringer of War

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Condoleezza Rice's Jewels

Condoleezza Rice's Jewels

I enviously read about all of the fantastic jewelry Condoleezza Rice received from Arab governments in the past year. The gifts are worth at least $316 million‚ and that's with the U.S. foreign policy being wildly unpopular. According to the Associated Press: In January, Jordan's King Abdullah II gave Rice an emerald and diamond necklace, […]

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What a Woman! What a Book!

What a Woman! What a Book!

I am still chuckling over this photo of Carl Bernstein deeply engrossed in his very own A Woman in Charge: The Life of Hillary Rodham Clinton on the plane. I want to read it too!

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