Morning multilateralism
Preemptive outrage: China’s angry about planned U.S.-ASEAN statement on the South China Sea. The White House makes its case for success at the U.N. No Lula, No Cameron, No Medvedev: is the U.N. losing out to the G-20? Ready to do it all over again: EU President Van Rompuy steadfast on defending the Euro. Britain ...
Preemptive outrage: China's angry about planned U.S.-ASEAN statement on the South China Sea.
Preemptive outrage: China’s angry about planned U.S.-ASEAN statement on the South China Sea.
The White House makes its case for success at the U.N.
No Lula, No Cameron, No Medvedev: is the U.N. losing out to the G-20?
Ready to do it all over again: EU President Van Rompuy steadfast on defending the Euro.
Britain only lukewarm on new EU derivatives law.
Is the WTO a victim of its own success? An argument that there’s no sense of urgency on Doha because protectionism has been kept at bay.
IMF fights money-laundering in Nigeria.
David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist
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