On Thursday night the first results from Britain’s referendum on pulling out of the European Union came in.
A small clue to the way things were going last night was the vote in the North East. read more »
EuropeWorking Class British Voters Led the European Union Rejection
by James Heartfield 06/24/2016
On Thursday night the first results from Britain’s referendum on pulling out of the European Union came in. A small clue to the way things were going last night was the vote in the North East. read more » »
Subjects:
Brexit Will Be Britain’s Fourth of July
by Joel Kotkin 06/22/2016
The campaign to take the United Kingdom out of the European Union, widely known as “Brexit,” is potentially on the verge of a huge victory Thursday despite overwhelming opposition in the media and among the corporate and political establishment. The outcome matters not just as an expression of arcane British insularity, but as evidence of a growing rebellion against the ever greater consolidation and concentration of power now occurring across all of Europe, as well as here in the United States. read more » Brexit: Why the Brits Will Stay... Or Go
by Matthew Stevenson 06/20/2016
On June 23, Britain votes on whether to remain in the European Union or to leave it. Either way, the point has been made and registered around the European continent that the British have more faith in the white rabbits of political fairy tales than they do in the sinkhole of Brussels and its economic policies. read more » »
Subjects:
Scandinavian Women Do Well, Except at the Top
by Nima Sanandaji 05/16/2016
In which part of the world should we expect most women to reach the top? The answer has to be the Nordic countries. According to The Global Gender Gap report, for example, Iceland is the most gender equal country in the world followed by Norway, Finland and Sweden. Yet as I will discuss below, this has not translated in women making it to “the top”, as one might expect. This a paradox that I will seek to address. read more » »
Subjects:
Paris: Are the Banlieues Still Burning?
by Matthew Stevenson 04/24/2016
Press coverage of the recent European violence often draws a line from the Arab slums around Paris to the violence that has recently engulfed Brussels and Paris. According to this theory, Arab refugees from Morocco and Algeria, and, more recently, Syria, who have settled on the impoverished outskirts of Paris, are to blame for the terrorist attacks because France and Belgium have been reluctant to assimilate Arabs into their European cultures. And youth unemployment rates in the banlieues -- suburbs -- of Paris and Brussels are, indeed, more than fifty percent in some districts. read more » Class and the EU referendum
by Tim Strangleman 04/18/2016
On June 23rd, voters in the UK get a say on whether to remain in the European Union (EU). The UK first joined what was then called the European Economic Community (EEC) back in 1973, and in a 1975 vote, 67% voted to stay in the EEC. The issue was fairly settled until Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron, under pressure from the right wing of his party and anti EU sentiment, promised an in/out referendum in the Party’s manifesto for last year’s General election. read more » »
Subjects:
Discount Airlines: The Cheap Seats Challenge
by Matthew Stevenson 01/31/2016
Market forces in the airline business are, for the moment, a battle between state-owned carriers like Alitalia and Aeroflot, and start-up discounters like Ryanair and AirAsia. The conflict between state monopolies and under-capitalized start-ups is a perfect metaphor for the economic debates over subsidies and competition that divide much of the industrial world in America, Europe, and Asia. When my dreams come true, carriers like these will encircle the globe with two-hour, $49 short-hop flights. read more » »
Subjects:
Traffic: Rome's Not-So-Smart Car Squeeze
by Matthew Stevenson 12/05/2015
Who would have thought that city planners in Oklahoma City would be more bike and pedestrian friendly, and better at taming car traffic, than those in Rome? read more » »
Subjects:
Too Many Places Will Have too Few People
by Joel Kotkin 11/16/2015
The adage “demographics are destiny” is increasingly being replaced by a notion that population trends should actually shape policy. As the power of projection grows, governments around the world find themselves looking to find ways to counteract elaborate and potentially threatening population models before they become reality. read more »
Subjects:
Berlin: The Imperial Impulse in City Planning
by Matthew Stevenson 11/15/2015
"He who controls Berlin, controls Germany, and who controls Germany, controls Europe." V.I. Lenin (but also attributed to Karl Marx, and sometimes to Otto von Bismarck) About the time that Syrian refugees were on the march to Germany’s safe havens, I spent a few days in Berlin, which is not only the capital of reunified Germany, but the unofficial capital of the European Union, as well as being hipster ground zero. read more » »
|
Subscribe to NG ArticlesThe Coming of Neo-Feudalism
Infinite Suburbia
Recent blog posts
BooksAuthored by Aaron Renn, The Urban State of Mind: Meditations on the City is the first Urbanophile e-book, featuring provocative essays on the key issues facing our cities, including innovation, talent attraction and brain drain, global soft power, sustainability, economic development, and localism. Recent popular content
Recommended Books
Blogroll and Partner Sites
User login |