Morning multilateralism, Oct. 25
An "uneasy truce": analyzing the results of the G20 meeting of finance ministers. The outcome appeared to be good enough for the markets. Celebrating U.N. Day in Sudan. Feeling jilted by Obama, is Europe flirting with Moscow? Survey says: The Czechs still believe in NATO. He knows of what he speaks: Sarkozy calls a Security ...
An "uneasy truce": analyzing the results of the G20 meeting of finance ministers. The outcome appeared to be good enough for the markets.
An "uneasy truce": analyzing the results of the G20 meeting of finance ministers. The outcome appeared to be good enough for the markets.
Celebrating U.N. Day in Sudan.
Feeling jilted by Obama, is Europe flirting with Moscow?
Survey says: The Czechs still believe in NATO.
He knows of what he speaks: Sarkozy calls a Security Council without a permanent African seat a "scandal."
A good analysis of the IMF’s new centrality — and new dangers.
Fault lines emerge on possible EU treaty revisions; meanwhile, there’s some movement on Serbia’s bid to join the European Union.
ASEAN gets a talking to on Myanmar’s elections, and its own policy of non-interference.
U.N. negotiations on combating animal and plant extinction struggle.
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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