Abandoned Footnotes

Stray thoughts, notes, and digressive ditties.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Links between Serbian, Tunisian, and Egyptian activists

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From a very interesting article in the NY Times : After a strike that March in the city of Mahalla, Egypt, Mr. Maher and his friends called...

Inequality, injustice, and democratization

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(Warning: an epically long post that meanders through the literature on inequality and democratization and comes to conclusions that probabl...
4 comments:
Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Why does the spread of protest follow regional and cultural lines?

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One of the things I find interesting about the recent events in Tunisia and Egypt is the fact that protest tends to spread along regional an...
3 comments:
Sunday, January 30, 2011

Twitter

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Almost without really meaning to, I've joined the ranks of the twitterati (partly I wanted to keep up with events in Tunisia and Egypt, ...
Thursday, January 27, 2011

Reflections on the Revolution in Tunisia

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I know basically nothing about Tunisia. (It seems that few people do: I tried a search for articles on Tunisia in Google Scholar and a few o...
Friday, January 21, 2011

Visualizing Political Change, now with Coups

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Here's a version of the video below , but now with coups d'etat: For a note on the sources, see my post below .

Visualizing Political Change

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I am mulling over a post on the events in Tunisia, but I've been distracted. I may get around to it eventually, but right now I've b...
6 comments:
Monday, January 17, 2011

Is oil bad for democracy? (A footnote on Thad Dunning’s “Crude Democracy”)

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The view that oil is bad for democracy and freedom has become conventional wisdom. (Any view espoused by Thomas Friedman is by definition c...
3 comments:
Saturday, January 08, 2011

The Weather under Ceausescu

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In Romania the temperature never officially dropped below 10deg C, even when there was ice and snow on the ground, because the law said that...
Wednesday, January 05, 2011

The Decline of Tyranny and the Rise of Dictatorship

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Happy new year! I've wanted to blog this for a while, but sickness intervened. May all your new years be free of bacterial warfare. At a...
Wednesday, December 15, 2010

The uncanny accuracy of European public opinion on the amount of foreign aid that governments give

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Ok, this is probably the last post on this topic for a while. But a student (thanks Andrew!) put some of the data on European perceptions ...
4 comments:

On the idea of Tolerable Outcomes (Epistemic Arguments for Conservatism V)

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What does it mean for an institution to be associated with “tolerable” outcomes over a period of time? The question is more subtle than I th...
Tuesday, December 07, 2010

One hypothesis weakened

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In an earlier post I wondered about the sensitivity of estimates of US foreign aid to the definition of foreign aid; if people included ...
1 comment:

The Robustness or Resilience Argument in Practice: Noah Millmann vs. Jim Manzi (Epistemic Arguments for Conservatism IV.55)

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Noah Millmann and Jim Manzi over at The American Scene (and Karl Smith at Modeled Behavior ) have been debating the degree of deference...
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Xavier Marquez
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