This is Karl Rahder's international relations course site. I use this blog for my IR courses at various universities and colleges. It has been neglected for a couple of years, but I am as of late 2016 beginning to add resources to it. News and research sites are listed in the sidebar on the right side of the page - scroll down for the complete list. Info on topics of interest as well as class assignments appear in the main posts.
Friday, August 22, 2008
Georgia admits it miscalculated
One of the most puzzling aspects of the recent war was what the Georgians expected when they launched their artillery barrage to re-take South Ossetia. Did Saakashvilli really expect the Russians to do nothing as they pushed into the province, wresting control of an area that was virtually a Russian proxy state? Apparently, the answer is yes, they assumed that the Russian military would not intervene. Big mistake. See this piece in the Financial Times for a glimpse into the Georgian miscalculation.
Thursday, August 14, 2008
Georgian journalist gets shot by sniper, then finishes her story!
See this link for video of a Georgian journalist getting shot by a sniper! And see this dramatic footage of Turkish journalists being shot at (and shot) by Russian soldiers in Georgia.
Thucydides and the Russo-Georgian War
I think the analogy is a bet sketchy, but go here for the article in the New York Times and International Herald Tribune.
Monday, August 4, 2008
Worldmapper: amazing site!
Since I have a feeling that people are not using the "international research & think tanks" sidebar, I am putting this up as a new post. But really, whenever you want to research a topic, you should go to the sidebar and find a good research site. Way too many people are wasting time by going to Wikipedia, which is not a good strategy for informed analysis.
Try sites such as www.cfr.org or www.fpa.org or others on the sidebar.
The idea is that they have taken key data in many areas (such as infant mortality or access to clean water or forest depletion or even toy exports) and have then created world maps that reflect each country's usage patterns. Thus, for something like birth rates, sub-Saharan Africa is huge and most of Europe appears to be tiny.
Go here to click on any of worldmapper's 366 maps. That's right; 366 maps.
Give it a try. Amazing source.
Sunday, August 3, 2008
Email and print instructions
For your OpEds, print off a copy (make sure you have a bibliography) and also email me a copy at karlrahder at yahoo dot com
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