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Search Result for “Cambridge University Press”

Showing 1 - 10 of 1,392

OPINION

Donald Trump and his tragedy of errors

Oped, Joseph E. Stiglitz, Published on 29/04/2026

» It is true, as Alexander Pope once said, that to err is human. But while everyone is fallible, some humans are more prone to error than others. The history of authoritarian and absolutist political rule is rife with figures whose mistakes proved calamitous not just for themselves but for the societies they ruled.

OPINION

Thailand's need for AI sovereignty

Oped, Craig Warren Smith, Published on 29/04/2026

» Thailand is building a serious AI policy architecture. Last year, the National AI Committee, formed by then Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra and Digital Economic Minister Prasert Jantararuangtong, initiated drafting a unified AI law, officially known as the Draft Principles of the Artificial Intelligence Law.

OPINION

Asean is adrift

Oped, Postbag, Published on 28/04/2026

» Re: "Rupture, reform and how to rebuild", (Opinion, April 23). 

OPINION

The global AI threat has arrived

Oped, S Alex Yang and Angela Huyue Zhang, Published on 24/04/2026

» Anthropic's new artificial intelligence (AI) model, Claude Mythos Preview, has alarmed business leaders and policymakers around the world because of its extraordinary ability to find and exploit vulnerabilities in major operating systems and web browsers. Even the Trump administration, which has feuded with Anthropic in recent months over certain military uses of its models, now seems keen to work with the company to protect critical government infrastructure from cyberattacks.

OPINION

Bangkok gets better

Oped, Postbag, Published on 24/04/2026

» Re: "What's up, governor?", (Editorial, April 23). The editorial presents a cautious view of Chadchart Sittipunt's tenure, but risks overlooking the scale of everyday improvements across the city.

OPINION

How can we future-proof the global economy?

Oped, Mohamed A El-Erian, Published on 23/04/2026

» An uncomfortable reality is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore. The global economy is in a period of "more frequent and violent shocks", as Nobel laureate Michael Spence puts it. Instead of facing isolated and temporary disruptions, we are confronting a structural shift towards unsettling volatility, deepening fragmentation, and a wider dispersion of outcomes for countries, companies, and households. The old world is gone, and virtually everyone risks losing out in the new one. The question is by how much and what to do about it.

OPINION

Vaping menace shifting more into childhood

Oped, Karnjana Karnjanatawe, Published on 23/04/2026

» The news of primary school children posting themselves vaping on Instagram is a warning sign. Viral images of young students vaping or smoking e-cigarettes have now become strikingly casual and performative, speaking volumes about how far the problem has gone.

OPINION

Forget births, cut Thai deaths first

Oped, Sergei Scherbov & Vipan Prachuabmoh, Published on 23/04/2026

» Thailand's demographic debate is too often framed as though the country had only one option: raise fertility or accept a shrinking workforce. That view is understandable, but for the next two decades, it is mostly the misaligned policy horizon. If the question is how Thailand can strengthen its workforce before mid-century, the fastest answer is not higher fertility, but rather lower mortality.

OPINION

PM must step up for peace

Oped, Editorial, Published on 21/04/2026

» On Monday, a bomb exploded in front of a school in Bannang Sata district of Yala province, injuring an Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) officer. The same morning in adjacent Pattani province, a security volunteer was killed by someone using a military-grade weapon as he rode a motorcycle from his home to begin a security protection shift.

OPINION

Is the Iran war America's Suez or its Gallipoli?

Oped, Yanis Varoufakis, Published on 21/04/2026

» When Egypt closed the Suez Canal for five months in 1956, it triggered events that shrunk the global standing of Britain's pound sterling, inaugurated the petrodollar age, and demonstrated how a small country can inflict serious damage upon the economic power that had subjugated it decades earlier.