Tag Archives: human rights

Omicron Omnishambles: Holland Thrown into Abrupt Lockdown! #Omicron

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Filed under Economics, Urban Life

Lost Generation Latest: Children Born During Pandemic ‘Disadvantaged for Life’!

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Filed under Education

#JapanTravelBan: Fresh Analysis on the International Student Dimension #EducationIsNotTourism

As the leaves fall from the trees in London, England – the city of this company’s headquarters – we’re happy to point you in the direction of a seminal new article that’s just been published on our corporate website. Education Is Like Oxygen: Why Mediolana Went Viral In Japan #JapanEducationBan tells the story of a tweet which tapped into one of global higher education’s hottest contemporary topics – the international student ban implemented by Asia’s third-largest economy.

Enjoy!

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History Channel Latest: Ireland Ditches Vaccine Passports! #vaccinepassports

https://twitter.com/Mediolana/status/1437858855036375046

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Filed under Technology, Urban Life

Dustbin of History Latest: Denmark Junks Vaccine Passports! #vaccinepassports

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Filed under Media, Political Science, Psychology

The Future is Now: Five Steps Towards a Greater Asia

In a media environment saturated with dissection of inconsequential minutiae, it is sometimes a struggle to keep one’s eyes on the ‘substantive images’: the developments of serious import that will concretely define the direction of the world. It was therefore with some relief that we at Mediolana became aware of Parag Khanna’s mildly provocative The Future is Asian: Commerce, Conflict and Culture in the 21st Century, a book that seeks to direct its audience’s attention to the inexorable rise of the planet’s most populous continent.

Khanna’s thesis correctly underscores the undeniable significance of Asia – an act which is not hard to accomplish, but which few have attempted with anything like his stridence and lucidity. Asia possesses a number of the world’s largest economies and most of the world’s foreign exchange reserves; its military potency is exceptional, particular in terms of manpower; and several of its more ambitious countries are taking giant strides on political stages both domestic and international.

Much of this material is borderline unarguable. However, Khanna’s work possibly falls short on its prescriptions for greater Asian integration, which he views as ‘natural’ for what he perceives as a ‘continental system’ similar to that of the European Union.

In fact, Asia is much more diverse – geographically, linguistically, religiously, culturally – than Europe. Democracies border onto dictatorships, while communist nations sustain curious alliances with putative theocracies. A huge amount remains to be accomplished when it comes to fashioning a coherent power bloc out of 49 states which have widely divergent political economies; after some contemplation, what follows are five steps towards a greater Asia:

  1. Asiavision. Pan-Asian soft power events – such as a continent-wide song contest à la Eurovision – can go a long way towards creating a genuinely continental cultural space.
  2. Abolishing absolute poverty. Speaking of soft power, Asia will never fulfil its potential while such large numbers of its citizens – particularly in regions such as South Asia – are needlessly languishing in morally indefensible penury.
  3. Urban infrastructure. China’s Belt and Road initiative – while mammoth in scale – still does not address the need for dramatic investments in public transportation across much of the continent, including the cross-border high-speed rail projects which can connect up regions.
  4. Legislation. Asia presently lacks a continent-wide equivalent of the European Commission, or indeed the African Commission. It should fill this gap with a directly-elected institution which has the technocratic expertise to harmonise and elevate the standing of environmental and industrial laws.
  5. Human rights. Far too many Asian nations (China, Saudi Arabia et al) have little to contribute in the field of basic human rights promotion; at the other end of the democratic spectrum, Asian states still reflexively take their cue from the West rather than evaluating trends more critically. An independent human rights court could go a long way towards remedying this.

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Filed under Economic Development, Economics, Law, Political Science, Urban Life

Waking Up to the Next World Cup: First 2022 Dedicated Soccer Stadium Unveiled!

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Vest Foot Forward: Police Reaction to High School Protests Gives #GiletsJaunes New Urgency!

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Filed under Economics, Education

FaceTime, 2.0: Exploring China’s Classroom Conundrum

As a positively sweltering September makes itself felt here in London, England, we have yet another top longer read to draw your attention to. China’s Classroom Conundrum: Are Facial Recognition Registration Systems Clever Or Creepy? addresses one of the hottest topics in contemporary educational technology, and it’s exclusive to Mediolana.com. See you back at home!

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Filed under Education, Technology

Word Down: China Bans #Internet Sales of Planet’s Most Popular Book!

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Filed under Law, Political Science, Spirituality