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  • OPINION

    South Korea: Very competitive and childless

    Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 05/03/2024

    » There are enough people to go around: eight billion now, compared to two billion less than a hundred years ago. Fifty-one million in South Korea, compared to only twelve million a hundred years ago. So why are South Koreans obsessed about their low birth rate?

  • OPINION

    The baby bonus just does not work any more

    News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 22/05/2023

    » I was one of five children -- not seen as a particularly big family in Newfoundland at the time -- and there was one year when we allegedly beat Guatemala to have the highest birth rate in the world. (That's probably not true, but people were proud of it anyway.)

  • OPINION

    Shrinking Asia changing global demographics

    Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 26/01/2022

    » In the politics of population, the magic number is 2.1.

  • OPINION

    Playing football won't turn boys into manly men

    Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 12/02/2021

    » It seemed innocent enough at the start: just a surge in the number of boys coming to school with notes from doctors saying they were excused from playing contact sports. But pretty soon high schools all over China were having trouble finding enough willing young men to make up a football team.

  • OPINION

    The silence over China's Muslims in Xinjiang

    News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 13/03/2019

    » Muslim governments were not silent when Myanmar murdered thousands of Rohingya, its Muslim minority, and expelled 700,000 of them across the border into Bangladesh. They were unanimous in their anger when the Trump administration moved the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. But they are almost silent on China's attempt to suppress Islam in its far western province, Xinjiang.

  • OPINION

    China and its repression of the Uighurs

    News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 23/08/2018

    » Two weeks ago, Prof Gay McDougall, co-chair of the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, alleged that up to a million people belonging to the Uighur and other Muslim minority groups in China's northwestern province of Xinjiang have been detained in concentration camps to be "re-educated" about religion.

  • OPINION

    Brazil picks up pieces after Rousseff's fall

    News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 09/09/2016

    » On Tuesday former Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff left the presidential palace in Brasilia and boarded a plane for her adopted home city of Porto Alegre. She leaves behind a successor who risks indictment for far worse offences than the ones that brought her down, and a country that has lost its right to a place among the Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (Brics) association.

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