Morning multilateralism, Oct. 3
Currency conflict looms large as IMF meetings approach. Meanwhile, Hungary insists that there is life without the IMF. Beggar, meet chooser: The EU welcomes Chinese offer to buy Greek bonds. Also, in wake of Roma conflict, Brussels hunkers down for more bashing from Paris. Syria changes tack, looks to World Bank for infrastructure support. The ...
Currency conflict looms large as IMF meetings approach. Meanwhile, Hungary insists that there is life without the IMF.
Currency conflict looms large as IMF meetings approach. Meanwhile, Hungary insists that there is life without the IMF.
Beggar, meet chooser: The EU welcomes Chinese offer to buy Greek bonds. Also, in wake of Roma conflict, Brussels hunkers down for more bashing from Paris.
Syria changes tack, looks to World Bank for infrastructure support.
The United Nations tries to control the diplomatic damage on climate change.
Still not in Europe: Australia and NATO exchange longing looks.
Has Indonesia gotten too big for ASEAN?
Are African Union troops on the move in Mogadishu?
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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