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January 11, 2007

Where Labor, Environmental Activists Have Failed

The Wall Street Journal

The Wall Street Journal's Robin Moroney highlights Aaron Chatterji and Siona Listokin's "Corporate Social Irresponsibility" [Issue #3], writing that "The authors suggest that people interested in business practices should devote the majority of resources to their pre-1990s strategy: lobbying for government regulation, rather than attempting to cajole or threaten profit-oriented corporations into doing what they don’t want to do." Read the entire piece here.

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In Front of His Nose

Martin Kettle: Christopher Hitchens has had an orchestra seat from which to view history and has captured a lot—but what has he missed?

Why We Must Judge

Roger Berkowitz: It’s not all relative: Without judgment, a society loses its sense of justice.

From Democracy's Pages to Law of the Land

News: A letter from Editor Michael Tomasky on the signing of the financial regulatory reform bill -- and the new consumer financial watchdog it establishes that was first written about in Democracy.

Politico Discusses Michael Tomasky's

News: Writing in Politico, reporter Abby Phillip spoke with Michael Tomasky about his recent essay "Against Despair," which appeared in the Summer 2010 issue of Democracy.

Experts Respond to "The Baby Business"

News: Some of the world's leading adoption organizations and experts have responded to E.J. Graff's piece from our last issue.

America 2021: The Military and the World

The Defense Roundtable: Our largest threat: Pakistan. Our alliances: reshuffled by demographics. Terrorism: on the wane (maybe). New frontier for conflict: the Arctic cirlce. Four experts discuss

The Hezbollah Problem

Steven Simon and Jonathan Stevenson: To defang Iran, and help Lebanon and Israel, we must demilitarize Hezbollah. Which means we'll have to talk to them.

The Rove Legacy

Thomas B. Edsall: He concedes nothing. He accepts no responsibility. He blames liberals. Why Karl Rove is still an icon for today's Republicans.

Toward an i-Welfare State

James P. Pinkerton: When will all the benefits of e-commerce come to e-government? A response to the previous issue's symposium on liberalism.

The Debate Inside Iran

Nader Hashemi: Some fascinating Iranian intellectuals are laying the groundwork for democracy. What chance of success do they have?

V-Day in the Culture Wars

Ethan Porter: The culture wars are over, and we've won. We should learn to celebrate that--and move on to the next battle that demands our attention.

Against Despair

Michael Tomasky: How our misreading of history harms progressivism today.

DMV Liberalism

Joe Klein: Good governance--starting with transparency and citizen access--is the predicate for everything else.

What Happened to Women?

Katha Pollitt: Instead of moving to the center, liberalism should try embracing people who are actually liberals—starting with women.

Obama and Civic Idealism

Michael Sandel: Obama can still redefine liberalism, but he must bring economic power to heel.

Radical Sheet

Elbert Ventura: What the short, rumbustious history of Ramparts magazine means for modern journalism.

Wilson, Past and Present

Trygve Throntveit: The neoconservatives turned Woodrow Wilson into something he was not. In truth, Obama is more like him than Bush ever was.

That Old College Lie

Kevin Carey: Are our colleges teaching students well? No. But here's how to make them.