Part 6: A New Treaty?
Revelations of the War in Ukraine: An anti-war activist’s personal and political reckoning
Part 5: After Ukraine
Revelations of the War in Ukraine: An anti-war activist’s personal and political reckoning
The U.S. and UK Are a Wrecking Ball Crew Against the Pillars of Internationalism
They have undermined the sovereignty of nations and mutilated international law
Kashmir’s Silent Suffering
New Anguish in the Midst of an Old Struggle
Celebrating Human Rights
The 70th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
The Children’s Rights Movement Takes Off
What the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child offers students
Borders and the Politics of Mourning
In early 2014, the artist Anton Christian placed a shattered wooden boat in front of the impressive baroque Cathedral of St. Jakob in the heart of the Austrian city of Innsbruck. Christian had found the boat on the shores of the Adriatic Sea and brought it to Innsbruck to evoke ...
A Tribute to Economist Bernard Maris (Sept. 23, 1946 – Jan. 7, 2015)
I was shocked to learn that Bernard Maris had been murdered at a meeting of the editors of Charlie Hebdo in Paris on January 7, 2015. He died at his desk, killed by the fanaticism that he regularly denounced.
Bernard Maris was an economist and a member of the governing board ...
Human Trafficking
A psychoanalytic and socio-historical view
I am going to think and write about human trafficking through a perspective both psychoanalytic and socio-historical. In fact, part of my quest and my thinking about this matter is to find the right disciplinary mix to speak from and to. This essay is situated in a problem. ...
Black Faces, Red Skins and White Celebrations
In the country where I grew up, the Netherlands, Saint Nicholas’ yearly visit is a hugely popular celebration, rich in rituals and designed to make children happy. Three years ago, the celebration came to New York, where I now live. It seemed only logical to expose my half-Dutch children to ...