Subscribe via Email
Search
Archive of all posts
Top blog posts
- The Weaponization of Laïcité Against Muslims: Pushing More Towards Extremism
- The Cultural Veil: Iran’s Weaponization of Culture to Oppress Women and Deflect Criticism
- The impact of the mass media on the quality of democracy within a state remains a much overlooked area of study
- The Catalan Crisis: Is There a Right to Self-Determination in the International Context?
- “Something Olde, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blue…”. On the twenty-eight separate European elections of 2014
- The Quiet Collapse of the Italian Economy
- UN General Assembly resolution on Basic Principles on Debt Restructuring Processes: a first step towards a global state bankruptcy regime?
-
Recent Posts
- The Cultural Veil: Iran’s Weaponization of Culture to Oppress Women and Deflect Criticism
- What does the fragmentation of the Bundestag mean for Germany?
- Vox, Covid-19, and populist discourses in Spain
- The EU has lost its touristic touch: Countries like Cyprus, Spain and Malta are trying to regain it
- The Weaponization of Laïcité Against Muslims: Pushing More Towards Extremism
Popular Tags
- austerity
- Bailout
- Blame
- Brexit
- Catalan Independence
- Catalonia
- Corruption
- Crisis
- debt crisis
- Democracy
- ECB
- Election
- elections
- EU
- Euro
- Euro crisis
- European Elections 2014
- European identity
- European integration
- European Public Sphere
- European Union
- Euroscepticism
- Eurozone
- Eurozone crisis
- Germany
- Greece
- growth
- immigration
- Inequality
- Italy
- Journalism
- media
- Media Systems
- Nationalism
- Neoliberalism
- Podemos
- populism
- Press
- Public Sphere
- Referendum
- refugee crisis
- Spain
- SYRIZA
- Ukraine
- unemployment
Tag Archives: default
Mar 4 2016
Argentina debt restructuring deal – 15 years too late!
6 CommentsBy Kanad Bagchi On 28th February 2016, Argentina finally reached a settlement with the rest of its holdout creditors lead by Elliot Management in what is being hailed as ‘historic’ signalling the return of Argentina to international bond markets. While … Continue reading
Posted by: March 4, 2016
Tagged with: Argentina, Creditors, debt crisis, Debt restructuring, debt sustainability, default, Eurozone, IMF, Sovereign Debt, sovereign debt crisis
Jan 28 2015
The End of Austerity in Europe?
5 CommentsBy Max Hänska After a spectacular swing to the left, away from a political establishment that ruled the country uninterrupted for decades, Greece’s election signals the changed mood that is taking hold of Europe. Austerity has failed. What economists have … Continue reading
Posted by: January 28, 2015
Tagged with: austerity, Crisis, default, ECB, elections, Eurozone crisis, SYRIZA
Oct 1 2014
Why Italy Will Not Make It
17 CommentsBy Roberto Orsi Three articles by prestigious commentators (Ambrose Evans-Pritchard and Roger Bootle for The Telegraph, Wolfgang Münchau for Financial Times) have recently appeared in the financial press about the economic situation of Italy and the (in)stability of its national … Continue reading
Posted by: October 1, 2014
Tagged with: Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, austerity, Decline of Europe, default, ECB, Eurozone architecture, Eurozone crisis, Financial Times, German Constitutional Court, Implosion, Italian economy, Italian public debt, Maastricht, Mario Draghi, Neo-Keynesian policies, Neoliberalism, Reforms in Italy, Roger Bootle, The Telegraph, Wolfgang Münchau