New Internationalist
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Articles in Sept, 2004 issue of New Internationalist
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From this month's editor
by Chris Richards -
Highlighting the work of photographers from the Majority World
by Neo Ntsoma - Fish & spy chips
- Fahrenheit 9/11
- The Weeping Meadow
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Tomorrow's codswallop
by Daniel Margolis - Genetic giant swats seed-saving farmer: Monsanto notches up legal victory in Canada
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'Let us speak!' Social debate is opening up China … but the Communist Party still dictates. Chris Richards tracks the boundaries of the new political space
by Chris Richards - The NI prize crossword
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Whys and wherefores
by Sandra Sewell -
AIDS uncovered
by Karen Jayes - Boxed in: entries from the diary of a Beijing television addict
- Big bad world
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Taking charge of our lives
by Simon Norton -
Code of misconduct
by Charles Arthur -
A single spark starts a prairie fire: buckling under taxes and corruption, Chinese farmers are fighting back. Yu Jianrong argues that, to calm the countryside, rural people must be given a formal voice
by Jianrong Yu - Interview with Marie Hilao-Enriquez
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Co-op success
by Stoney Bird - Kentucky Fried Cruelty
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The body as weapon
by Urvashi Butalia - A look at the sky from the bottom of the well: minorities in China whose mouths are being closed
- Gifts & publications catalogue 2004/05 from the New Internationalist
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Ethical rating
by Dieter Gerhardt -
Time for Tobin
by David Hillman -
Ugly elections: media headlines are not all that's missing from the 'critical mass' of democracy in Afghanistan
by Jim Lobe -
When the tide goes out, the rocks are revealed: media barons claim that the foreign press can help bring democracy to China. Yuezhi Zhao tracks the paper tigers lurking in their rhetoric
by Yuezhi Zhao -
Pros and cons
by Jane Wylie -
Savannah pigeons
by Benjamin Dangl -
Fresh fears in Congo: region seeks to avoid rerun of Africa's worst war
by Moyiga Nduru -
A short history of free speech in China
by Rana Mitter -
Stereotypes
by Akos Magyar -
Peaceful trade
by Anna Battista -
Where the broom does not reach, the dust will not vanish: to whose voices is the Chinese Communist Party listeningthe capitalists' or the workers'? Chris Richards tunes in
by Chris Richards - Ae Fond Kiss
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Overdue debate
by Sam Jackson -
The language of international politics …
by Mitchell - Let a hundred flowers bloom! Brave voices that are bringing change
- Benares and In Babylon
- Living Rights: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Stories and Poems
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Bones and myths: Reem Haddad explains how a quiet ceremony brings into focus the fantastic life of a woman who both enjoyed and disregarded privilege
by Reem Haddad - Speechmarks
- Worldbeaters … taking aim at the rich and powerful
- Out of the Reeds
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Philippines
by Belinda Rhodes
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