The Alexandria Declaration. Between March 14 and 17, 2004, intellectuals, scholars, economists and activists from around the Arab world met at the new
Alexandria Library in Egypt for the
Arab Reform Conference. Among the recommendations of the conference was that all Arab governments should ratify "all international conventions on the rights of women providing for the abolition of all forms of discrimination against them."
posted by Ty Webb
on Mar 29, 2004 -
5 comments
It seems likely that we'll be hearing a lot more about
tort reform, especially
medical malpractice tort reform, over the next couple years. Sadly, many don't even know exactly
what a tort is, let alone
how the tort system works, although most have heard about individual lawsuits
through the media. Conservatives tend to focus on
capping damages,
reigning in juries, and
allowing businesses to contract out of tort liability. Liberals
generally oppose these proposals, and some have
a few ideas about reform as well. Of course, we could always follow the example of
New Zealand and
scrap the tort system altogether. Maybe the Supreme Court will give the GOP some suggestions about reform in their
latest tort case.
posted by boltman
on Nov 7, 2002 -
32 comments
If You Want to Talk About Class Warfare... Molly Ivins gives it to 'em:
Some days, you have to believe that right-wing ideologues have lost touch with reality completely. Their latest proposal to prevent future Enrons is - ta-da! - cut the capital gains tax. And exactly what does that do to prevent future Enrons? Nothing.
posted by Ty Webb
on Aug 15, 2002 -
9 comments
The House has passed the bankruptcy reform bill that Clinton vetoed at the end of the last session. I'm mildly optimistic that it won't pass the Senate, given that the Democratic vote in the House was split. But should we be worried at all?
At first glance, it doesn't seem like a bad idea. But so many consumer groups are against it, and it seems to benefit credit card companies while hurting individuals, so I'm inclined to think we should leave things as-is. Especially since personal bankruptcies are down and credit card issuers' profits are up. Anyone know more about this?
posted by aaron
on Mar 1, 2001 -
7 comments