World

Seeking Justice Where There Is No Peace Seeking Justice Where There Is No Peace

As conditions worsen in Darfur, the nascent International Criminal Court, whose mandate is to bring genocidaires to justice in a chaotic environment hostile to the rule of law, is ...

May 24, 2006 / Feature / Anja Tranovich

Heckuva Job Heckuva Job

Desperate to report progress in Iraq Bush boasts that the newest Iraqi leader has taken his phone call twice. Wow. And it only cost $200 billion and thousands of dead and maimed Am...

May 24, 2006 / Column / Robert Scheer

‘Why Can’t We?’ ‘Why Can’t We?’

Confronting the forces of war, genocide and lawlessness begins with the belief that individual citizens have the power--and the responsibility--to focus our government's mind, chan...

May 23, 2006 / Feature / Samantha Power

Bitter Wine for Israel’s Bedouins Bitter Wine for Israel’s Bedouins

Israel's plans for a series of farms and wineries designed to draw tourists to the Negev Desert is the latest insult to its marginalized Bedouin population.

May 23, 2006 / Feature / Neve Gordon

Surveillance for Sale? Surveillance for Sale?

It's outrageous enough that the NSA is secretly monitoring Americans' calling patterns. But has anyone considered what would happen if unscrupulous monitors sold that information t...

May 22, 2006 / Column / Nicholas von Hoffman

In the Black(water) In the Black(water)

Hurricane victims are still homeless in New Orleans, but thanks to the federal government's $30 million contract bonanza, Blackwater USA's profits are soaring.

May 22, 2006 / Jeremy Scahill

The Scramble for Oil The Scramble for Oil

The Bush Administration's warm embrace of the Equatorial Guinea's despotic President Teodoro Mbasogo demonstrates how low it will go in pursuit of oil.

May 18, 2006 / Feature / Cora Currier

Wind From the Mideast Wind From the Mideast

"The Road to Damascus" explores the strange, the beautiful and the uncanny in Syrian cinema.

May 18, 2006 / Books & the Arts / Stuart Klawans

Dead Souls Dead Souls

Juan Rulfo's Pedro Páramo, written during the cultural renaissance that followed the Mexican Revolution, is a marvel of storytelling and testament to the power of the word.

May 18, 2006 / Books & the Arts / Carmen Boullosa

George & Tony’s Not So Excellent Adventure George & Tony’s Not So Excellent Adventure

If democracy represents the will of the people, then there is either something wrong with democracy in the United States and Britain or something wrong with the people on both side...

May 18, 2006 / Column / Gary Younge

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