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Search Result for “erosion”

Showing 1 - 10 of 83

OPINION

Coast pays the price

Oped, Editorial, Published on 13/01/2026

» The flooding caused by high seas that battered coastal communities in Bang Khunthian, Bangkok, last week is a reminder that coastal erosion remains inadequately addressed.

OPINION

Stock Exchange of Thailand casts aside taboos

Oped, Editorial, Published on 12/01/2026

» The Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) is on the cusp of a progressive reform that could inject much-needed vitality into our capital market.

OPINION

Map it, please

Oped, Postbag, Published on 26/09/2025

» Re: "Road collapse shocker", (BP, Sept 25). Indeed, a picture is worth a thousand words -- if there is one! But why, oh why, are Bangkok Post reporters incapable of including a map with their articles, whether they are about new roads, floods, border problems, or whatever?

OPINION

Polycrisis merits renewed ethos

Oped, Edgar Morin & Claudio Pedretti, Published on 24/09/2025

» In 1999, one of us (Morin) introduced the term "polycrisis" to describe the web of interconnected catastrophes threatening our world. At the time, the concept was meant to serve as a warning, but it has since become our reality. We are facing a confluence of escalating ecological, political, economic, technological, and existential crises, each of which is reinforcing the others.

OPINION

Indonesian democracy on brink

Oped, Lili Yan Ing, Published on 11/09/2025

» Less than 11 months into his term, Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto faces a stark choice. He can be remembered either as a leader whose presidency was defined by public anger and discontent, or as one who recognised the challenges facing his country and acted in the national interest.

OPINION

The postwar era's first democratic authoritarian

Oped, Antara Haldar, Published on 08/09/2025

» The 78th anniversary of India's independence last month offers an opportunity to recall one of the most insidious moments in the country's post-independence history: prime minister Indira Gandhi's 1975 decision to declare an emergency and suspend civil liberties. A new book by political scientist Srinath Raghavan, Indira Gandhi and the Years That Transformed India, not only revisits that fateful move, but also traces its lasting impact half a century later.

OPINION

Philippines sidelines local languages

Oped, Analiza Liezl Perez-Amurao and Michael Thomas Nelmida, Published on 09/07/2025

» In October 2024, the Philippine government, in its management of a linguistically rich and culturally diverse population, decided to make the then-existing Mother Tongue-Based Multilingual Education (MTB-MLE) expire by not signing it.

OPINION

A new economic order needs a moral compass

Oped, Adriana Abdenur, Published on 24/06/2025

» Even before US President Donald Trump launched his assault on the global economy, it was facing not only a structural crisis but a collapse in the values that once justified and guided international cooperation. The retraction of multilateralism reflects not just weakened institutions and geopolitical tensions but also a loss of shared principles for international cooperation and a shift toward unilateralism, transactional diplomacy, and zero-sum nationalism.

OPINION

Asean builds trust in digital future

Oped, Satvinder Singh & Thomas Beloe, Published on 26/05/2025

» As Asean jockeys to be at the heart of the modern digital economy, fostering trust is key to reaping the benefits of growing digitalisation and further empowering the vulnerable segments of the population.

OPINION

Foreign aid, the powerful US soft power, is gone

Oped, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 23/05/2025

» 'Don't it always seem to go, that you don't know what you've got 'til it's gone." When Joni Mitchell sang that line in 1970, she was lamenting the destruction of the environment, but the sentiment applies to many issues. Today, we can add official development assistance (ODA) to the list.