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Search Result for “square”

Showing 1 - 10 of 173

OPINION

City's green spaces losing ground

Oped, Thunpicha Greigarn, Published on 30/03/2026

» Like the body, most of Bangkok's battles happen beneath the surface. By the time you notice, the damage is already done.

OPINION

Truth will prevail over Russia's war on Ukraine

Oped, Viktor Semenov, Published on 25/03/2026

» This recent February marked 12 years of armed aggression against my country and also marks five years since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The Kremlin has constructed a series of myths that revolve around Ukraine's Revolution of Dignity, which Russia labels a "coup d'état by a junta," the alleged "threat from Nato", the so-called "protection of Russian-speaking population", and the sham referendums conducted at gunpoint in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine, which are legally null and void.

OPINION

Can artificial intelligence kill imaginary friends?

Oped, Naomi R Aguiar & Marjorie Taylor, Published on 13/03/2026

» Will we someday have nostalgia for a time when children talked to an imaginary friend instead of an AI companion?

OPINION

Deliberation and bureaucracy can live together

Oped, Joe Mathews, Published on 23/02/2026

» Deliberative democracy is now officially entangled in state bureaucracy. And that's good news for citizens around the world.

OPINION

It's the economic history, stupid

Oped, Iker Saitua, Published on 14/01/2026

» Every year, I walk into a first-year lecture hall in Bilbao at the University of the Basque Country (EHU) and watch shoulders slump. The title of the course I'm teaching -- "Economic History" -- draws a similarly dejected reaction from my students: "Meh." "Boooring." "What's this even for?" Some call it "the history class", as if it belonged to another century.

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

The end of China's one-child policy, 10 years later

Oped, Yi Fuxian, Published on 09/01/2026

» Jan 1 marked a decade since China repealed its one-child policy. Just ten days earlier, Peng Peiyun, who long oversaw the often-brutal enforcement of China's family-planning rules, died at the age of 96, having never been held accountable for her actions. Some obituaries praised Peng for being "reform-minded", even though, in practice, she only perpetuated an utterly inhumane policy, whose consequences have barely begun to materialise.

OPINION

How world order looks after 2025

Oped, Yuen Yuen Ang, Published on 05/01/2026

» For mathematicians, 2025 may stand out as a "perfect square": 45 multiplied by 45, a rare symmetry. But its significance goes far beyond numerical elegance -- it marks the year the postwar global order expired and a new one began.

OPINION

It's time to choose peace

Oped, Editorial, Published on 25/12/2025

» More than two weeks after armed clashes were reignited on Dec 7, Thailand and Cambodia have tentatively agreed to return to square one by reviving a key bilateral mechanism -- the General Border Committee (GBC) -- with the aim of seeking a peaceful resolution, or at least a ceasefire.

OPINION

When the news is wrong about my homeland

Oped, José González Vargas, Published on 11/12/2025

» The people of Venezuela conjure contradictory images, particularly for those living in the Global North. We're starved and oppressed masses under a totalitarian thumb, but also arrogant and pigheaded émigrés living in golden exile from Miami to Madrid. More recently, we are hordes of criminals, the scum of the Earth, flooding into the United States. Where's the truth? Where's the lie?