Troubles with Viktor: Latest developments in Hungary
Once a genuine liberal democrat, Hungary’s prime minister Viktor Orban is slowly tightening his party’s grip on the Parliament and with it on his native country as a whole. However, Hungarians are a persistent bunch and they proved to the world many times that in the long run, it is them who hold the winning [...]
Last interview with Vaclav Havel: To bomb Belgrade was a tough decision
We publish the last interview given by the late Czech President Vaclav Havel, which was given to our contributor Jakub Janda in December 2011 on the issues of civic heroism, human indifference and what turned out to be one very frustrating translation. It is exclusively available in English only at our magazine.* Jakub Janda [...]
Interview with Tomas Valasek: “EU has too few soldiers!”
Interview conducted by Czech political analyst Jakub Janda with respected security expert Tomas Valasek on the question of European defense, Libya, and the future of NATO in the light of the decline of American support. In your recent study, Surviving Austerity – The Case for a New Approach to EU Military Collaboration, you argue that [...]
China’s peaceful rise and the good neighbor policy
‘China’s road of peaceful development is a brand-new one for mankind in pursuit of civilization and progress, the inevitable way for China to achieve modernization, and a serious choice and solemn promise made by the Chinese government and the Chinese people.’ Peaceful development is the inevitable way for China’s modernization. With these incisive and forceful [...]
Putin’s Eurasian Union: A danger or strategic opportunity?
When Vladimir Putin recently published an article in the Russian daily Izvestia that officially announced his plans for the establishment of an Eurasian Union in the geographical space of former USSR countries, he caused quite an uproar in the Western media.1 The headlines such as those in the Telegraph run that Putin’s wish is nothing [...]
Egypt: Facing the Challenge of Democracy
The elections in Egypt are a great deal since the aim of the Tahrir Revolution was and still is ‘democracy’. Considering the on-going experiences of my country, Turkey, I am very well aware that the consolidation of democracy is not something that might come over in one election. It will take years before Egypt is [...]
Drug Trafficking and Countermeasures in Turkey: A General Assessment
Drug trafficking has been on the global agenda for more than a century.1 In simplest terms, it is a global illicit trade involving the cultivation, manufacture, distribution, and sale of substances which are subject to drug prohibition laws.2 Globally, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) estimates that between 149 and 272 million people, [...]
Ten awkward questions to ask Crazy Crab, cartoonist who challenges China’s Great Firewall
EVERYONE is looking, but nobody knows who he is. Bloggers around the world, censors and guardians of the World Wide Web, national and foreign press. In recent weeks, there is too much talk about him, Crazy Crab, pseudonym of the first cartoonist who challenges China’s Great Firewall doing political satire. Hexie Farm is a political [...]
Turkish Women’s Movement
It is known that cultures have deep impact on societies and ‘directs’ its people. Cultures consist of long-term practices, traditions, customs, proverbs and more. Moreover, cultures usually shape the way people live. The culture in Turkey has limited the Turkish Women’s Movement, but has not destroyed it. However, cultures can be changed very slowly. For [...]


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