Friday, March 06, 2026

Asociación para el Estudio de la Economía Cubana: El Repositorio de Investigación de ASCE Cuba ya está disponible en versión beta

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 English language version here

Me complace comunicarles esta noticia de Rafael Romeu, presidente y director ejecutivo de Dev Tech Systems, Inc., y presidente de la Asociación para el Estudio de la Economía Cubana, miembro de su junta directiva. Gracias a su labor, ya está disponible todo el repositorio de artículos e informes de investigación elaborados desde la década de 1990 para la Asociación. El comunicado de prensa explica el proyecto de la siguiente manera:

Durante más de tres décadas, ASCE CUBA ha estudiado una pregunta central: ¿cómo sería realmente una transición de la dictadura a una economía de mercado y una democracia en Cuba? Desde 1990, este trabajo ha generado más de 1000 artículos de investigación, creando uno de los corpus académicos más completos sobre el futuro económico de Cuba. Hoy, Cuba enfrenta quizás su crisis económica más grave en décadas. La escasez de energía, el colapso de la infraestructura y el rápido deterioro económico están impulsando conversaciones serias sobre el futuro del país. Esto hace que este repositorio sea más relevante que nunca.

SAGE, de DevTech Systems, Inc., convierte 36 años de investigación en algo interactivo. En lugar de revisar manualmente cientos de artículos, investigadores y legisladores pueden explorar el archivo, hacer preguntas y ver exactamente de dónde proviene la evidencia. La plataforma se encuentra actualmente en fase beta, pero dada la urgencia del momento, consideramos importante ponerla a disposición ahora y comenzar a compartirla con la comunidad investigadora y política. Si trabaja en políticas para Cuba, transiciones económicas o desarrollo en América Latina, le animo a explorar la plataforma y agradecemos sus comentarios a medida que continuamos mejorándola.
A continuación, encontrará el comunicado de prensa y los enlaces al repositorio de la ASCE


 

Association for the Study of the Cuban Economy: ASCE Cuba Research Repository Now Available in Beta

 

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 Versión en español acquí

I am delighted to pass along this notice from Rafael Romeu, President and CEO of Dev Tech Systems, Inc, and the President of the Association for the Study of the Cuban Economy on the board of trustees of which I serve as a member. Thr5ough his efforts, the entire repository of research papers and reports produced since the 1990s  for the Association for the Study of the Cuban economy are now available. The Press Release explains the project this way:

For more than three decades, ASCE CUBA has been studying one central question: what would a transition from dictatorship to a market economy and democracy in Cuba actually look like? Since 1990, that work has produced over 1,000 research papers, creating one of the most comprehensive bodies of scholarship on Cuba’s economic future. Today, Cuba faces perhaps its most severe economic crisis in decades — energy shortages, collapsing infrastructure, and a rapidly deteriorating economy are forcing serious conversations about the country’s future. That makes this repository more relevant than ever.

What DevTech Systems, Inc.'s SAGE does is turn 36 years of research into something interactive. Instead of manually digging through hundreds of papers, researchers and policymakers can explore the archive, ask questions, and see exactly where the evidence comes from. The platform is currently in beta, but given the urgency of the moment we felt it was important to make it available now and begin sharing it with the research and policy community. If you work on Cuba policy, economic transitions, or Latin American development, I encourage you to explore the platform — and welcome feedback as we continue to improve it.

The Press Release and links to the ASCE Repository follows below.

Pix credit and link to repository here

 

Thursday, March 05, 2026

Pablo Lerner on "Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel"--Essay in the BYU Law International Center for Law and Religion Studies Blog

 

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 I was delighted to learn that my colleagues over at the Talk About: Law and Religion Blog, a blog (really a formidable essay site of the the International Center for Law and Religion Studies (ICLRS) at BYU Law, edited by co-editors are Dmytro Vovk (Director of the Center for the Rule of Law and Religion Studies, Yaroslav the Wise National Law University, Ukraine), and Amy Lynn Andrus (Associate Director of the ICLRS), with contributing editors are Jane Wise (former ICLRS Associate Director), and blog originator Donlu Thayer (ICLRS Senior Fellow) had recently published a quite interesting essay, authored by a long time colleague Pablo Lerner (Professor of law at the Zefat Academic College and the College of Law and Business in Ramat-Gan (Israel)) and first published at Talk About on 19 February 2026.

The essay is entitled  "Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel." It is also reproduced below. Professor Lerner describes the object of the essay this way:

Last year a draft law was presented in the Israeli parliament regulating a variety of issues regarding religion in public spaces. In particular, the law prohibits public authorities from interfering with the putting on of, or the helping of others put on, tefillim (phylacteries) in public spaces. The draft law also prohibits public authorities from impeding the act of praying in a public space or public building. However, in a synagogue or educational institution, authorities may require that any prayer be conducted according to local Jewish custom. The draft law also establishes the duty to install a mezuzah (scroll case) in public buildings. 
One can study this draft law as part of a series of legislative initiatives launched by the parliamentary coalition composed of religious and right-oriented parties currently ruling in Israel; in that light, the draft law could be seen as the result of what has been defined as an alliance between religious-infused markers of identity and the current populist assault on constitutional democracy in Israel. This short post does not attempt to enter into cumbersome political questions but rather limits its analysis of the draft law’s text to seminal questions about the relationship between state and religion in Israel.  ("Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel." )

My mind immediately wandered to Quebec (among other places in the liberal democratic West):

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Quebec Premier François Legault and Secularism Minister Jean-François Roberge announced that they will introduce a new law this fall to ban prayer in public spaces. The measure comes in response to what Roberge described as the "proliferation of street prayer" — a practice that has become synonymous with mass Islamist displays, particularly in the wake of pro-Hamas and pro-Palestinian demonstrations. Street prayer is no longer the image of quiet devotion. From Toronto to Times Square, it is political theater, often conducted en masse, blocking roads, obstructing entrances and projecting intimidation into the heart of civic life. (here)

Yet this was an effort that was strongly opposed by Christian faith communities for value their own evangelization practices (Quebec bishops slam proposed public prayer ban). And, indeed, Christian evangelism and the legal structures in places like the United States suggest a constricted space for State regulation, but not management: subject to reasonable and neutral time, place, and manner rules (and the avoidance of public disorder limits), everyone is welcome to preach the "good news" of their own faith communities to their hearty's content, or the requirements of their faith  but subject to public disorder limits as well.    

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And that suggests the issue for Professor Lerner--the nature and shape of neutrality in a State that acknowledges its foundational religious character. In the old days (and not so long ago), majority Christian or Muslim communities "solved"the issue through programs of hierarchically structured privileging. The contemporary approach is neutrality--but formal neutrality can be undone "in effect" in everyday life (as opposed to the abstracted space of theory or principle incarnated as text). In the context of great disparities of numbers, habits, expectations, and the like, faith communities may be effectively privileged by the way in which they can physically displace or occupy spaces in ways that suggest not neutrality by effective control on the ground. These are old problems; but for the most part they are problems left unattended precisely because they tend to stir "things" up. Yet this "stirring things up," when undertaken by a majority faith community, merely confirms in physical space, the occupation of virtual spaces which may be understood as the connection between the faith community and social-cultural expectations and baselines. When the displacing is undertaken by minority faith communities (or their smaller sub-communities) against the space assumed by the majority that displacement may seem to distort their relative societal "claims" to shared spaces. 

That is the conundrum that Professor Lerner explores but in the context of a "Jewish" Israel where that context produces a certain irony, but one not unknown either to Judaism or for that matter to any of the Abrahamic religions: "According to the draft law’s explanatory notes, the reason for the proposed law is that “in recent years, we have witnessed cases in which the denial of the ability to wear tefillin or conduct Jewish prayer in the Israeli public sphere occurs, whether through bureaucratic restrictions or through public pressure . . . .”".  ("Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel." ). This can be understood in one of two principal ways (there are others of course). The first touches on delineating "fairness" in sharing public spaces as between different religions (the essence of the problem highlighted by Quebec). The second touches on contests for control of shared spaces among sub-communities (sects) within a larger single faith community.  Here the issue touches not on Jewish-Christian-Muslim jostling for spaces, but as between different faith communities within Judaism. Yet Judaism merely provides an example of a much larger problem--the Abrahamic religions, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and perhaps even that last of its incarnations as Marxism--have all fractured into a variety of sects the conversations and conflicts between them may be as intense and deeply felt as between the aggregated faith community and others.  Professor Lerner provides a window onto  a problem, the resolution of which is not easy, yet the intensity of the need for resolution is high.

These two ways of approaching the issue are united by  at least two issues that they reflect. The first is  personal to those performing (witnessing) their faith in public--variations of what one might call faith based communal self-actualization. One must, in this context perform publicly one's faith as a means of declaring one's faith allegiance and to comply with the dictates for conformity to the expectations of religious behavior that connects one more tightly to the community of believers in ways that are not hidden. That is an outward expression of personal reinforcement of faith. The second, and for the State perhaps more challenging int he context of providing structures for stability--is projected from out of the faith community and onto those who must witness these faith performances in public spaces. That is, that the personal performance of religion in public spaces is not merely personal to the individual but is directed toward the infidel (in its original sense of those who are not part of the community of the faithful). It is meant to perform evangelization in spaces where the infidel may be found--and thus found, perhaps converted to the faith. In that form, and under some circumstances, it can produce political instability in the sense of disturbing the relations among faith communities sharing a single political space. This is especially pronounced where evangelization is interpreted by another faith community as directed against them (and the faith community must feel targeted for all sorts of reason).  For some large faith communities, the two are intimately intertwined (See, e.g., Catechism of the Catholic Church, §§ 4-10; 849-855; 904-907). But that intertwining is contextual and varies widely, including in ways that belie the formal textual expectations for faith communities but appear in practice (eg Pakistan: UN experts alarmed by lack of protection for minority girls from forced religious conversions and forced marriage). These bring the realities of incarnated abstractions very very close to home in ways that can be deeply felt; and that is what separates the more cerebral and virtual world of formal text from the rougher world where the virtual assumes physical form in the physical spaces in which physical humans act, that is where they transform the potential expression of text into its specific performance in time, place, and space.

Over these trajectories are placed the political-economic framework within political cohesion is structured. These focus, in many liberal democratic states (at least recently) on formal neutrality (by the State) and open access (formally) to all groups, limited, to some extent where formal approaches may be overtaken by the functional consequences of facially neutral legal and operational structures. The result of these trajectories in multi-religious political communities is that the State faces quite difficult choices especially where the State operates within cognitive structures of formal neutrality (limited by corrupted intent) but in which faith communities feel what on the ground appears to be an unwilling obligation to engage in the evangelization efforts of (numerically) superior or powerful faith communities seeking to strip them of members, and perhaps position, 

 It is within this larger context that one can understand Professor Lerner's quite important analysis in the Israeli context, and not just in the Israeli context, but also within the context of the management of interactions as expressed in and through public spaces among different sub-faith communities all seeking not just self-affirmation but evangelization among a specific target population (members of the Jewish community perceived as in need of the correction of religious error in belief and practice). This "internal dialogue" among Jewish sub-communities has been ongoing in sometimes very public forms since the time of the occupation (or association) of the Kingdom of Israel by the Romans. Likely before that as well (if for example one considers the controversy over the primacy or monopoly of Temple practice  after challenge by the Egyptian Jewish community in Elephantine (The Jewish Temple at Elephantine),and perhaps with more relevance, the quite contentious intro-Jewish religious divisions which was the religious state of affairs during the time  accepted as that of the ministry of Jesus (the well known Pharisees, Sadducees, Essenes, Zealots, Samaritans, Herotians, etc.). The religious and political fluidity n that sot of religious environment might well continue to serve as a source for "learning applied to contemporary problems.   

Professor Lerner suggests that the State of Israel appeared to solve the problem of friction within the greater Jewish community in time honored liberal democratic ways--time, place, and manner regulations . He notes both the explanation of the problem and the traditional approach this way: 

According to the draft law’s explanatory notes, the reason for the proposed law is that “in recent years, we have witnessed cases in which the denial of the ability to wear tefillin or conduct Jewish prayer in the Israeli public sphere occurs, whether through bureaucratic restrictions or through public pressure . . . .”This explanation can hardly be considered sufficient. First, most people who put on tefillin every day do so at home or at the synagogue and not in public places. Second, municipal inspectors do not generally interfere with the putting on of tefillin in public. While they have removed tefillin stands and fined those who set them up without proper authorization, such incidents have been relatively few and have been resolved relatively easily. So, why has the draft law been proposed? ("Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel").

In effect, the State noted the problem in context with respect to the fulfillment of personal religious obligation  (to wear tefillin) and the importance of its evangelization objectives (through State management of tefillin stands).  Something else, then, might be at play in the marshaling of State regulatory power to move away from this approach to the one adopted. 

Professor Lerner suggests the context. The first speaks to history. These arguments are found in the draft law's explanatory note. That is that there ought to be special sensitivity toward the regulation of those essential symbols of Judaism that had been used as the instruments of thousands of years of persecution--which continues into contemporary times ("the proposed law aims to ensure that symbols for which and through which Jews were persecuted throughout generations will not become controversial in the Jewish state" Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel").  Professor Lerner suggests that the explanation while powerful in itself loses punch in context. That context appears to favor, through the neutral language of the law, a particular preference of the State a particular sub-group among the Jewish community of the faithful within a State context that moves closer to a more intimate connection between that form of Jewish community and the State ("While this provision could not be characterized as having a specific theocratic flavor, it envisages at least a very particular understanding of the parameters used to define Jewish identity."  Ibid.). Professor Lerner also notes that liberal democracy continues to protect (though the limits and understanding of this is more contested now in virtually all liberal democratic constitutional systems) people against religion. That is that it protects religious and non-religious Jews against the annoyance or unwelcomness of evangelization, especially evangelization  of forms that appear to be privileged by the State. "Therefore, [Professor Lerner suggests] the draft law seems to embody the current parliamentary coalition’s religious populism by endorsing values of particular groups interested in fostering a specific lifestyle for the whole Jewish collective" (Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel").

This possibility, born of possible intent and the interpretation of long running conflicts among Jewish cub-communities respecting authenticity, enhanced by parallel contests for the control of the mechanisms of State to add "umph," then, shapes consequence. And those consequences center on the definition and management of public spaces for religious expression. Here, Professor Lerner suggests the interpretive problems of the draft law. They include unintended consequences and the usual failures by a legislature to think things through. Yet those are the ordinary stuff of legislation that appears, like the3 common cold, in legislation all over the world and without regard to the lofty generative premises of a political system. 

That is not, however, the principal focus of Professor Lerner, who also and quite astutely notes--one runs up against our old interpretive "friends"--formalist neutrality (and with it its high though abstract ideals) on the one hand, and, on the other, the realities of context that can transform even the most glorious neutral principle into an instrument for displacement, privilege and effectively corrupting any sort of "level playing field" for the intertwined performance of personal religious obligation in communal setting, and evangelization within the broad umbrella that is Judaism, even in Israel. Jews in Herodian Israel might have  understood this better than their progeny in the contemporary State of Israel. The resonance and its politics, however is unavoidable and perhaps, given the unique context of Jewish life over the last two millenia, and the politics, internal to Israel, around the establishment of the State, perhaps to some extent sui generis.  

In Israel, the regulation of religion in public spaces reflects the status quo that existed during the Mandate. In 1947, the Israeli government reached an agreement with Orthodox groups that the government would not alter the regulations pertaining to Shabbat, kashrut (kosher foods), marriage and divorce, and the autonomy of the religious education system as it existed prior the establishment of the State of Israel. While the goal of this status quo was to find a compromise with Orthodox groups, it also served to protect the autonomy of Orthodox communities. The status quo has never been a static idea, and there have been shifts, clashes, and discussions over issues like the opening of shops, the use of public transportation on Saturdays, or the introduction of hametz (leavened grain products) in hospitals during Passover. Should the draft be approved, it could be seen as a new shift of the status quo in favor of strengthening Orthodox presence in the public space. (Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel").

Encapsulated within this is the concern over the privileging of one of Judaism's faith streams as against the others. At stake is the control of the concept of "Jewish identity"--but much more to the point, the effort to reduce that "identity" to a single stream of variation within the aggregated Jewish faith communities. Yet if Jewish identity is to be understood in the plural (the way that Muslim and Christian identity is also multiplied by its various sects, some of which are quite large and powerful and some of which are not) the the use o the State to develop a political concept of a singular Jewish identity carries with it the challenge of avoiding the instrumntalization of that political identity with  a political choice about the privileging of some sub-communities over others within the variegated ecologies that is in its micro-lived manifestations that is modern Jewish identities on the ground. As Professor Lerner puts it: 

The question regarding uses of public spaces is also associated with the idea of equality (equal access of different religious groups to public facilities and spaces), but the draft law disregards equality under the rubric of fostering Jewish identity. If authorities must exercise this power in an equal and proportionate manner, could the possibility of other religious political groups setting up stands in the streets be rejected? And what about placing stands for secular purposes in clearly ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods? (Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel"; and with respect to the last point consider: 'We Rattle the Public Order': Israeli Cops Shut Jerusalem 'Secularization' Stand for Haredim, Allow Tefillin Stand).

Of particular interest are two areas that Professor highlights respecting this quite difficult challenge.  The first touches on issues of process and "choice of [Jewish] law." The second touches on the use of the State to define what it means to be Jewish and through that process to exclude some who except in the eyes (and doctrine) of other members of the Jewish faith-family view themselves as Jewish. With respect to the first, Professor Lerner focuses on that part of the draft law that "provides that a dispute brought before the courts, relating to the draft law, should be decided by a judge who passed an evaluation showing that he knows how to use Hebrew Law as a tool for deciding issues of legal lacunae and for resolving disputes relating to this law. The draft law adds that no judge who has not successfully passed this evaluation shall be appointed to any forum." ("Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel"; noting that the draft law defines Hebrew Law as "Torah law as practiced by the Council of the Chief Rabbinate and in accordance with its directives" Ibid, n. 8). Professor Lerner notes the slippery slope of choosing judges well versed in the interpretation of Hebrew law where there are various schools of interpretation corresponding to various Jewish sub-communities of the faithful.   This calls to mind the way other faith communities have handled similar challenges--Catholics consolidated  religious law, Protestants learned to live with fracture and loose confederation as against outsider; Muslims developed institutionalized schools of jurisprudence within a matrix of differentiated sub-communities in Islam (Sunni, Shia, etc.). For Israel the effect might be to bring Hebrew law more intimately connected with general legality  ("Hebrew law was included alongside Israeli Heritage, but even since then, and apart from questions of personal status, Hebrew law has fallen short of playing a significant role in Israeli law." Ibid.).

With respect to the second, and quite contentious issue in Israel, Professor Lerner notes:  

According to the proposal, a Jew is someone whose Judaism has been recognized by the Chief Rabbinate of Israel for marriage purposes according to Israeli law, or who meets the Rabbinate’s requirements for such recognition. This definition is different from the definition found in Section 4b of the Law of Return 1950, where Jew means a person who was born of a Jewish mother or has become converted to Judaism and who is not a member of another religion. In Israel conversion, Reform and Conservative, at least done abroad, is recognized for purposes of immigration according to the Law of Return. However, the draft law attaches the definition of Jew to the definition of the Central Rabbinate, which excludes Reform and Conservative Judaism. ("Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel").

The complications of this failure of coordination can be viewed in a number of ways. One of them is carelessness; another is as an instrument to effectively modify the Law of Return from the side. Perhaps, and impossibly in the current climate, the resolution might require reshaping the Chief Rabbinate. One is back to the world of Biblical Judaism, but one with stronger State structures, more sophisticated jurisprudence and sharpened rivalries for evangelization and dominance among the many communities that together constitute contemporary Judaism. The draft law is in this sense symptomatic of larger issues that sometimes tend to dominate the internal life of religious communities, not just that of the Jewish community (except with respect to its own context). And to that extent there are lessons worth considering here applicable everywhere where religious interaction with the apparatus of multi-religious states, even those with a religious foundation, may find worth contemplating. But s is its alternative: that the State may or must choose among competing sub-communities and construct their systems of religious interaction on that basis. And that is not an problem of Israeli law; but one that touches all political systems that have not chosen the path of laïcité. . . . or of theocratic governance (the theory of which I once considered here). Israel has attempted the harder middle path and has chosen to consider its operation within Judaism as opposed to between Jewish and other faith communities in Israel. And that creates the problem and the goal the articulation of which ends Professor Lerner's essay: "There is nothing negative in trying to involve more people in liturgy and Jewish practices. Religion and tradition should be allowed to freely practice and thrive. But this should not be done by dodging basic principles of the rule of law and public order." ("Freedom of / from Religion in Pubic Spaces? About New Law Proposal in Israel").

The complete essay follows below and may be accessed in the original here


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Wednesday, March 04, 2026

Global SWF March 2026 Report: Deep dive into AI funding, geographical preferences, and USA's SWFs





Global SWF has announced the publication of its March 2026 Report. They provide highlights:
1. Sovereign Investors had a stronger February, with US$ 25.2 billion deployed in 52 transactions. Read all about the deals, results, appointments, vacancies, and other activities at the Global SWF Times.

2. A significant part of this capital is being invested in AI “start-ups”. We offer an in-depth analysis of the funding of the 10 largest private companies, and how much Sovereign Investors are betting on them.

3. The infographic of the month looks at the geographical split of the portfolios of the Top 40 Sovereign Investors, and how these have changed over the past 20 years. The big winner has been the United States.

4. The fund of the month goes to New Mexico State Investment Council (NMSIC), which is aiming at becoming the US largest state fund by 2030. Do not miss our chat with its SIO (CEO), Mr. Jon Clark. In that context, we run a comparison between NMSIC, Alaska PFC and Texas PSF, the three largest US SWFs – looking at growth of their balance sheet, asset allocation and investment performance.
The interesting element here is the focus on the U.S: and A.I, investment. The investment focus suggests, in turn, a deeper interpenetration between public finance (one step removed) and the management and elaboration of the AI sector.  
 
FTI Consulting has had this to say:
 

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Tuesday, March 03, 2026

"Emergent Global Trends in Data Governance"; Conference Fordham International Law Journal 20 March 2026

 

 Delighted to pass along this announcement:

The Fordham International Law Journal proudly presents its annual symposium, "Emergent Global Trends in Data Governance," a timely, high-impact convening on the future of data privacy, power, and regulation in a rapidly digital world. Bringing together leading scholars, practitioners, and policymakers, the symposium will explore how global data governance is being reshaped in the age of digital surveillance, cross-border data transfers, and competing international privacy regimes. Expert panels will examine cutting-edge issues, including fintech’s management of sensitive personal data, the challenges of regulating data across borders, and rights-based strategies for harmonizing privacy protections worldwide. The symposium will feature a keynote address by Rebecca Kelly Slaughter.

 Conference and registration information follows below.

The Problem With Assessment is the Standard Against Which it is Measured--在全党开展树立和践行正确政绩观学习教育 [A Party-wide Education Campaign to Establish and Practice a Correct View of Performance]

 

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Assessment is both a tool and a weapon. In the hands of administrators and administrative systems it can be used  to discipline and advance the work of a collective towards its goals, and in the process build solidarity and unit trust. That is the ideal. All to often, and in every institution, it can serve as the means through which administrators may, with more or less ruthlessness, rationalize through the corruption of rules and standards systems, treat subordinates as personal servants and instruments of self-serving agendas clothed within the scientism of a "rules based" system, the veneer of which provides enough cover so that superiors can wink or pretend to ignore this corruption--as long as their own (personal and institutional) needs are satisfied. 

But none of this is possible without standards against which conduct can be assessed. That assessment, in turn, bounded by those standards, is instrumental for deepening the presumption that decisions grounded on these methods are "fair" and rational". And they are, of course. Nonetheless, that is true only to the extent that the standards of assessment, and their application, are themselves fair and rational.  

But fair and rational to whom? 

For the corrupt official--anyone from university administrator, government official, church leader, enterprise techno-bureaucrat, and civil society manager, and those to whom they report--for the self-serving manager,  "fairness" and "rationality" are measured as against their needs, their desires, their emotional relationship with those who, though they serve the organization, are understood as serving those managers first and as tools for the attainment of managerial greater glory. The object--standards-- is invested with meaning, is given significance, only in relation to the desires and needs of the assessing manger, the official who has understood standards as tools for ensuring that they are appropriately serviced. The positive effect of the application of those standards on the objectives of the collective are only consequential, to be achieved only to the extent necessary to ensure the personal progress of the official. 

For the collective--any collective that engages int he rationalization of assessment of its productive forces (including its sometimes less that selfless servants in managerial roles)--"fairness" and "rationality" are measured against the needs and objectives of the organization itself. And that, in turn, is measured against the organizing premises and goals of the collective--its morals, values, and understanding of purpose.  The object--standards--are constructed from out of these foundational elements and deployed, from time time with respect to then contemporary collective objectives and expectations.

Mediating between the two--the collective needs of the organization against that of officials who use assessment as the cover for their own self-serving application--becomes a difficult task for any organization. It requires the development of two sets of frameworks and the connections between them. On the one hand there are no assessments without standards that reflect the needs of the organization relevant to time and purpose. On the other there are also standards, usually expectations--defined by duty of some sort--of officials in good faith application of standards not for their personal benefit but for the enhancement of the operation of the organization. That struggle is endless but requires substantial investment by all assessment related stakeholders.  Perfection is elusive. It requires a constantly shifting and intensely contextual interplay between standards, standards application, and the performance of good faith in both respects. 

These are some of the ideas and thoughts that came to mind as one considered the announcement of the Communist Party of China's latest campaign--在全党开展树立和践行正确政绩观学习教育 [A Party-wide Education Campaign to Establish and Practice a Correct View of Performance], which was issued by the General Office of the CPC Central Committee and which appeared in the People's Daily and follows below in the original Chinese and in an English translation. 

 

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Monday, March 02, 2026

王毅出席联合国人权理事会第六十一届会议高级别会议 [Wang Yi Attends High-Level Meeting of the 61st Session of the UN Human Rights Council]

 

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 The UN's Human Rights Council continues to provide a space within which China can advance its construction of a global human rights framework with Chinese characteristics. To that tend Wang Yi, member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and Foreign Minister, attended  a meeting of the 61st Session of the HRC and discussed China's global human rights principles, which were made available to a Chinese audience in the People's Daily, 王毅出席联合国人权理事会第六十一届会议高级别会议 [Wang Yi Attends High-Level Meeting of the 61st Session of the UN Human Rights Council].

While there is nothing new here, repetition is its own virtue and in this case also provides the virtue of an essentialization of the Chinese framework.

一要奉行主权平等,守护全球人权治理初心。必须坚持各国平等参与、平等决策、平等受益,推动建设公正合理包容的全球人权治理体系。二要遵守国际法治,筑牢全球人权治理根基。各国应共同维护不干涉别国内政这一“黄金法则”,对以人权名义操弄双重标准的言行坚决说不。三要践行多边主义,破解全球人权治理挑战。各国应推动摒弃各种形式的殖民主义、种族歧视,妥善应对人工智能、气候变化与人权等新的课题。四要倡导以人为本,充实全球人权治理内涵。要将发展权置于多边人权议程更加突出位置,让人权进步可视可感可及。五要注重行动导向,提升全球人权治理效能。中国愿同国际社会协调行动,共同描绘全球人权事业新图景。

First, we must uphold sovereign equality and safeguard the original aspiration of global human rights governance. We must adhere to the principles of equal participation, equal decision-making, and equal benefits for all countries, and promote the construction of a just, reasonable, and inclusive global human rights governance system. Second, we must abide by international rule of law and consolidate the foundation of global human rights governance. All countries should jointly uphold the "golden rule" of non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries and resolutely say no to words and deeds that manipulate double standards in the name of human rights. Third, we must practice multilateralism and address the challenges of global human rights governance. All countries should promote the abandonment of all forms of colonialism and racial discrimination, and properly address new challenges such as artificial intelligence, climate change, and human rights. Fourth, we must advocate a people-centered approach and enrich the content of global human rights governance. The right to development should be placed in a more prominent position on the multilateral human rights agenda, making human rights progress visible, tangible, and accessible. Fifth, we must focus on action and enhance the effectiveness of global human rights governance. China is willing to coordinate actions with the international community to jointly create a new landscape for the global human rights cause. (王毅出席联合国人权理事会第六十一届会议高级别会议)

There is a lot packed in here in a very small textual space.  Nonetheless several core structuring principles can be identified. The first is sovereign equality as a basis for human rights governance.  That suggests a close connection between state prerogative and human rights as a supra-national construct. That is made clear by the second principle that imports the notions of sovereign non-interference into the governance of human rights by states.  The third grounds multi-lateral human rights governance on concepts of colonialism and race discrimination--both are relics, in a sense of the old 3rd World movement now modernized to apply to current challenges. But at their core they again deal with issues o sovereign inequality, and sovereign protection against interference bu other sovereigns as the essence of human rights colonialism (which is characterized as a bad thing). The fourth then centers development as the gateway human right, grounded in the sense of an inmate connection between development (modernization) and human rights progress that enhances the fundamental objectives of human rights governance in sovereign equality non-interference and ant-colonialism at a state to state level. The last focuses on human rights governance as producing something measurable by reference to the ordering principles that foreground human rights governance and that governance, in turn, as a function of modernization with national characteristics but in dialog with other states.. 

The People's Daily reporting follow in full below.  The full text of the address (Remarks by H.E. Wang Yi at the High-Level Segment of the 61st Session of the United Nations Human Rights Council) also follows below in the official English version.

Sunday, March 01, 2026

Perspective Matters for How One Identifies and Assesses Data to Weave into Significance

 

Pix Credit here

 

There will be lots of perspectives about the now ongoing military actions among the US, Israel, Iran and their allies.  For many commentators, the favored perspective revolves around the contemporary version of the ancient "Jewish question," including most of the ancient tropes repurposed and sanitized for contemporary tastes. I am not going to bother with them; they remain so normalized in the discourse as to be unremarkable--and so remarkable for the power of an old cognitive cage. And they come in various flavors as a sort of seasoning applicable to virtually any substantive analytic focus. This does not suggest that there is something that "must be done" about it. But it does suggest the value of self consciousness in following cognitive pathways as if they were somehow either logical or natural. 

Changing the analytical lens even a little, that is changing the grounding premises through which one gathers facts, gives them value and then builds on them to produce an analysis that is the aggregation of those signified data points, also changes the analysis, or at least changes the "political" or "legal" message that these data points, appropriately arranged, are supposed to "show." In that light one might profit from reading through Zineb Riboua's recent essay, The Iran Question Is All About China: Why Operation Epic Fury Is the Opening Act of the Indo-Pacific Century. The essay follows below and may be accessed in the original HERE.

I do not propose that the essay is "right" or "wrong"--only that it provides a window looking out at a different landscape and a reminder that analysis may sometimes be more a reflection of the landscape within whicvh it is created than of itself without regard to its anchoring landscapes. In that sense, the lands capping may become more important than the analysis, and the analysis more infused with the sensibilities of propaganda or in its highest forms solidarity with a cognitive and analytical orienting ideology than much of anything else.  

 

Pix credit here

Saturday, February 28, 2026

President Trump's Statement at the Start of US Action Against the Government of Iran

 

Pix credit YouTube here


To the members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard, the armed forces and all of the police, I say tonight that you must lay down your weapons and have complete immunity. Or, in the alternative, face certain death. So lay down your arms. You will be treated fairly with total immunity, or you will face certain death. Finally, to the great, proud people of Iran, I say tonight that the hour of your freedom is at hand. Stay sheltered. Don't leave your home. It's very dangerous outside. Bombs will be dropping everywhere. When we are finished, take over your government. It will be yours to take. This will be probably your only chance for generations. For many years you have asked for America's help, but you never got it. No president was willing to do what I am willing to do tonight. Now you have a president who is giving you what you want. (Scripted Transcript of remarks of President Trump)

President Trump announced the start of American military action against the government of Iran. The video of those remarks may be accessed HERE. Prime Minister Netanyahu also issued a video statement (discussed here).

It is far too early to speculate  much less to comment other than to restate positions that are both well known and well worn. Blood will change the analysis and the rationalization of its consequences. However the temptation is perhaps too strong to be avoided though much of it is rehash of traditional stances now years old applied to the current situation (eg here, here) but for perhaps useful strategic description see here. 

The full text of the remarks follows (with thanks to The National News).; though President Trump went off script so it is useful to watch the video. 

Friday, February 27, 2026

CfP: 2nd Asia-Pacific Politics and Public Administration (APPPA) HKU

 

Pix credit here (Garden of the Humble Administrator(拙政園)) 

 

Happy to pass along this CfP:

The 2nd Asia-Pacific Politics and Public Administration (APPPA) Conference in Hong Kong is Calling For Papers now!  The inaugural Asia-Pacific Politics and Public Administration (APPPA) conference, hosted by the Department of Politics and Public Administration  at HKU, brought together over 100 scholars to share exciting research and exchange ideas! The second APPPA conference will return this year on May 18-19, 2026. This conference aims to bring together scholars conducting cutting-edge empirical research across all subfields of political science and public administration, fostering dialogue among researchers from the Asia-Pacific region and beyond.  Abstract submission is now open until March 12. Please use this link to submit your proposals: https://hku.au1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_9t9dYsPFh4ItHwi.
The detailed CfP follows