The European Council on Foreign Relations

Shanghai view: What are you watching?

The Shanghai International Film Festival (SIFF) got underway this weekend. Amongst the speakers that they attracted to the opening events, media mogul Rupert Murdoch made an appearance, lavishing praise upon the rapidly growing Chinese film market – from $150 million in box office takings in 2005 to $1.5 billion in 2010 – but also highlighting the still highly restrictive nature of the market to outsiders. Few outside China know that the government only allows 20 foreign films onto Chinese screens every year.

To clarify, this does not mean 20 American films (though of course the 20 tend to mostly be American), but the Chinese government only allows in 20 films from outside the nation every year to be screened legally in Chinese cinemas. These are also edited for extreme violence or sexuality, leading to some rather odd cutaways. I went to see GI Joe – not a proud admission – and at

1 commentsRead more…

Tales from Tahrir Square

What’s it like to be at the heart of a revolution? We at ECFR London got a first-hand account on Friday when Ahmed Naguib, one of the central figures in the Tahrir Square protests, who was in the UK with a packed itinerary of meetings, paid us a visit. The kitchen of our Westminster office is a far cry from Cairo, but as we gathered round the table he nevertheless managed to conjure up  images of the “utopian republic” that protesters inhabited in the square during Mubarak’s last days.

After Tunisian dictator Ben Ali fell, Ahmed changed is Facebook profile to “The time has come,” with a photo showing a date: January 25th. When that day came, he began walking from his local mosque with five members of his family. Over the course of 20 kilometres, five people became around 30,000: “That day I learned the biggest lesson of my life; if you are sincere and you want to change you can

2 commentsRead more…

A wake-up call for Europe on human rights

How credible is Europe when it preaches to the rest of the world about human rights? That question was at the heart of the Black Coffee Morning held by ECFR London today. Thomas Hammarberg, Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, who is currently on something of a European tour to launch his new book ‘Human Rights in Europe: no grounds for complacency’, was the guest speaker. While he was careful to point out that the Europe has much to be proud of in its record on human rights (it is the only death penalty free region – if you exclude Belarus – in the world; it has a very professional and vigilant civil society; and its criminal justice systems remain something of a model) it falls short in its protection of human rights in a number of critical areas.

As a case in point, he highlighted the difference between Europe’s and Tunisia’s responses to the influx of migrants as a

2 commentsRead more…

On the site this week: 10th June 2011

This week ECFR published “What does Turkey think?”,an insightful collection of essays from Turkish insiders, looking at the dynamics inside this increasingly important country on the borders of the EU. The stagnant accession process, of course, is part of the story, but there is much more to examine, especially ahead of Turkey’s parliamentary elections in a few days time. The collection was edited by the head of our Sofia office, Dimitar Bechev.

As Dimitar has helped us build up a useful body of work on issues related to Turkey’s growth as a regional power, we have also put together a special section of the website where you can find this material – from podcasts to articles to blog posts, and, of course, a link to “What does Turkey think?”

Elsewhere:

Read more…

Germany in Europe: Going solo on nuclear

Since the times of Chancellor Schröder, Germany has been pretending that it is becoming ‘normal’, especially with respect to Europe and foreign policy – this is something that I recently argued in my policy brief: “The new German question: how Europe can get the Germany it needs”. The question, however, is what normalcy means. If you compare Berlin with the ‘normal’ behaviour of other EU countries, it has in recent months and weeks seemed to be becoming ever more ‘abnormal’. It simply does not behave like its fellow European countries on a range of policy issues.

It is not only that Germany has, in the recent past, become an unstable and unreliable partner in the EU, the NATO and UN. There also seems to be a new-found constant in German politics, which is to continue – at a steady pace – down the road towards political isolation. Germany continues to anger its European neighbours. 

2 commentsRead more…

Page 103 of 145 pages ‹ First  < 101 102 103 104 105 >  Last ›


Latest Publications

Syria: The imperative of de-escalation

A diplomatic strategy for the conflict in Syria

The continent-wide rise of Euroscepticism

Europeans are losing faith in the EU

Europe and the vanishing two-state solution

Europe can rescue the two-state solution

Europe’s strategic cacophony

27 countries in search of a proper security strategy

What does the Gulf think about the Arab Awakening?

Understanding the influence of the Gulf States

Georgia’s bumpy transition: How the EU can help

A new era for EU-Georgia relations?

The struggle for pluralism after the North African revolutions

What next for Egypt, Tunisia and Libya?

China Analysis: Shockwaves from the China/Japan island dispute

What does China think about the island dispute?

European Foreign Policy Scorecard 2013

A comprehensive evaluation of European foreign policy

The new political geography of Europe

How the euro crisis has affected politics in 14 EU member states