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Search Result for “Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio”

Showing 1 - 10 of 25

OPINION

Gaza hunger invites global shame

Oped, Binaifer Nowrojee, Published on 25/08/2025

» Starvation is the slow, silent unmaking of the body. Deprived of basic sustenance, the body first burns through sugar stores in the liver. Then it melts muscle and fat, breaking down tissue to keep the brain and other vital organs alive.

OPINION

Corrupt monks have lost their way

Oped, Sanitsuda Ekachai, Published on 14/07/2025

» Just as Thailand was about to celebrate Asalha Bucha Day and the start of Buddhist Lent, the nation was gripped by the biggest sex scandal ever to rock its clergy. How irony.

OPINION

Pope Francis the shepherd on the animal kingdom

Oped, Peter Singer, Published on 07/05/2025

» When Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was elected pope in 2013, many liberals had high expectations. Would priests be allowed to marry? Or, more radical still, perhaps he would open a path for women to be ordained? There were even some hints that he might recognise same-sex unions.

OPINION

Vietnam: Fifty years since the Fall of Saigon

Oped, John J. Metzler, Published on 30/04/2025

» Fifty years ago, on April 30, 1975, North Vietnamese military units surged into Saigon, the capital of South Vietnam, forcibly reuniting the country, thus ending 20 years of conflict.

OPINION

Centre-left parties must regain relevance in Germany

Oped, Bartosz M Rydlinski, Published on 01/03/2025

» Germany's Social Democrats are one of the West's oldest political parties, with a legacy of advocating parliamentary democracy, opposing Nazism, and leading the modernisation of postwar Germany. In addition to many notable labour, economic, and human-rights reforms the party has implemented over the years, ex-SPD leader and West German chancellor Willy Brandt's Ostpolitik in the 1970s laid the groundwork for Germany's reunification in 1990.

OPINION

Resisting digital feudalism in artificial intelligence

Oped, Mariana Mazzucato, Published on 13/02/2025

» This month's AI Action Summit in Paris comes at a critical juncture in the development of artificial intelligence. At issue is not whether Europe can compete with China and the United States in an AI arms race; it is whether Europeans can pioneer a different approach that puts public value at the centre of technological development and governance. The task is to move away from digital feudalism, the term I coined back in 2019 to describe the dominant digital platforms' model of rent extraction.

OPINION

World order frays as chaos rises

Oped, Mohamed ElBaradei, Published on 06/12/2024

» At 82, I have lived through countless political and social upheavals, enough to become somewhat inured to history's recurring cycles. But recent developments have left me profoundly shaken and afraid.

OPINION

7 moves to shape 'Future Ready Asean'

Oped, Kavi Chongkittavorn, Published on 15/10/2024

» Seven takeaways from the Vientiane summit will lay the groundwork for boosting the incoming Asean chair's profile and deliverability. These impetuses mean Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim will have his work cut out in heralding a new era of "Future Ready Asean".

OPINION

Fujimori's Peru and the price of neoliberal success

Oped, Antara Haldar, Published on 10/10/2024

» The script of Latin American politics too often reads like a "dictator novel," and on Sept 11, another chapter drew to a close with the death of Alberto Fujimori. As the president who most defined -- and divided -- modern Peru, his legacy remains a topic of heated debate. One version of Fujimori's epitaph would commend his economics and condemn his politics, but the deeper lesson his life story offers may be that it is impossible to separate the two.

OPINION

Ozone layer recovery offers hope

Oped, Robert Redford & Xiye Bastida, Published on 30/04/2024

» There was a time, not so long ago, when the depletion of Earth's ozone layer seemed like an insurmountable challenge. Decades of using harmful chemicals, such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), had threatened to cause irreparable damage to our planet. Without swift action, we faced the risk of climate destabilisation, ecosystem collapse, and the breakdown of our food system. Consequences that were once almost unthinkable became painfully real.