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Blog 3 Columns

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  • Blog 3 Columns



  • The global multilateral benefit-sharing mechanism under the Nagoya Protocol

    The global multilateral benefit-sharing mechanism under the Nagoya Protocol2

    • Environment and Energy, Op-ed
    • 18/03/2019

    Article 10 of the Nagoya Protocol provides for Parties to consider the need for and the modalities of a global multilateral benefit sharing mechanism for situations not covered under a bilateral approach. But why is it so difficult for Parties to settle the things straight on this matter?

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  • David vs Goliath: the EU competition’s dilemma

    David vs Goliath: the EU competition’s dilemma0

    • International Trade, Op-ed
    • 12/03/2019

    Since industrial giants from China and the US are becoming dominant players in certain sectors of global and EU markets, 19 EU governments proposed revising the EU’s antitrust rules with the aim to support and facilitate the emergence of so-called “European champions” to make the EU competitive vis-à-vis major world economies.

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  • How GAFA can bully banks

    How GAFA can bully banks0

    • Financial Policy and International Markets, Op-ed
    • 27/02/2019

    Facebook and Apple allow their users to exchange money with one another. Amazon grants loans to its sellers and is about to offer checking accounts to its younger users. Google Pay is the perfect online substitute for our analogical wallet. How long will it take before the GAFA (Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple) enter the banking club officially? Should commercial banks feel threatened by the big tech companies?

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  • Justice denied: Voiceless in Guantanamo

    Justice denied: Voiceless in Guantanamo4

    • Human Rights and Migration, Op-ed
    • 22/02/2019

    No charge, no trial, no conviction; only hours of torture and interrogation. The Guantanamo Bay Detention Center is a “secret” prison where kidnappings, forced disappearances and degrading prison conditions makes lives of detainees, a living hell. Prisoner rights are mostly not a popular topic of debate. But, can rights be called so if they can be dismissed so effortlessly?

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  • Roma integration programmes can actually make a real difference

    Roma integration programmes can actually make a real difference1

    • Op-ed, Social and Economic Policy
    • 18/02/2019

    An integration project in a village in eastern Slovakia, Spišský Hrhov, is a success story of Roma inclusion. It sets an example for policy-making and strategic targeting of funding for both the EU and other Member States. The EU urgently has to achieve higher value for money in future integration efforts.

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  • Energy policy of China: myth or success?

    Energy policy of China: myth or success?0

    • Environment and Energy, Op-ed
    • 14/02/2019

    China tries to find itself in the chaotic era of energy transition.

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  • Matera Capital of Culture 2019: an ‘open future’ with closed ports?

    Matera Capital of Culture 2019: an ‘open future’ with closed ports?0

    • EU Governance and Politics, Human Rights and Migration, Op-ed
    • 11/02/2019

    On January 19th 2019, Matera’s cave-dwelling districts, better known as “Sassi”, opened up to national and international guests and musicians for the celebration of its title as 2019 European Capital of Culture (ECOC).

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  • The Amazonian forest price tag: trade benefits vs environment and human rights

    The Amazonian forest price tag: trade benefits vs environment and human rights1

    • International Relations and Global Affairs, International Trade, Op-ed
    • 04/02/2019

    Indigenous leaders called on the European Union to not grant bigger access to its agricultural market until Brazilian president Bolsonaro refrains from deforesting the Amazonian rainforest and cutting back indigenous rights. The EU has a responsibility to preserve the environment for future generations.

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  • Should the EU care about civic and political opposition in Hungary?

    Should the EU care about civic and political opposition in Hungary?0

    • EU Governance and Politics, Human Rights and Migration, Op-ed
    • 30/01/2019

    It became almost impossible to pretend that Hungary is still a democracy. The autocratic tendencies of Orban’s regime are difficult to counteract without strengthening the existent civic and political opposition that is being intimidated by the police state.

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