crooked_timber

Human Left from Human Free

I don't have any major stake in the ongoing row (see here for a commentary) over the establishment of a Milton Friedman Institute at the University of Chicago. Friedman is a major figure in politics and economics, and it seems more or less appropriate to me that Chicago would continue his line of study (I'd guess it's safe to assume that the centre has the usual academic character and isn't simply a policy shrine). That said, people are in the habit of talking some real bollocks about the link between free markets and free societies. See Daniel on Crooked Timber refering to one supporter of the Institute citing China as a paragon of free market globalisation. In fact, as Daniel points out, China is an instance of accessing global markets through the close management of internal market development. As Stiglitz points out about the Washington Consensus on the Asian Tigers as were, they were held as instances of successful capitalism until the crisis of the 1990s and then held as instances of the failure of managed markets when they crashed. So this sort of thing ain't new.

Anyway, I'm not sure we should go to far in congratulating China on being an enormous version of Singapore.

On another note, Truth on the Market (which is generally a very enjoyable blog) points approvingly to a weird comment by Steve Horwitz where he asks why so many of his colleagues in the humanities and social sciences "still think Marxism and socialism have social value when those ideas were the inspiration, even if wrongly interpreted, for thugs who engaged in the killing of tens of millions of innocent people and the destruction of the economies of billions." Eh? Now, I don't think there's much point in a pissing contest on whose idea killed the most people, and I wouldn't find this quite so strange, even if it was highly arguable, if he said that the deaths and ruin resulted from an accurate porting of Marxism into policy (and thus that it has no 'social value,' whatever that means), but that it lacks social value because of a misinterpretation of Marxism? How so very strange. As I say in a comment on TotM, so much for Christianity, Islam and Judaism then. More to the point, how many people would it take waving Wealth of Nations in the air as they slit throats or push people out of helicopters before we decided that we'd better abandon capitalism too?

I suspect that this is all a heated argument thing, but if it is a measure of the standard of public intellectual-style reflections among these people (as opposed to what I assume is their good head for sums), they'd better shut the whole thing down now.

And so ends the day's pedantry.

Iraqi Interpreters

One of the hidden shames of the British prosecution of the Iraq war and occupation has been the apparent abandonment of interpreters in Iraq when the army was done with them. It did appear that this had been solved, with the government promising UK refuge to Iraqis who had worked for them during the last few years.

According to today's Times, though, the government might be in the process of drawing back on their (which means: our) promises. For further detail see Dan Hardie's blog. For what you can, and ought to, do if you live in the UK, see here.

Via Crooked Timber

It's Very Quiet

It's the time of year again when we academics are welcoming a new crop of students into our classes.

I always have mixed feelings about this time of year. Apart from the obvious that Winter is coming and that the students stay the same age but I get older, the new academic year serves as a reminder of the fundamental questions any teacher worth their salt ought to ask.

It's easy to wonder about the formal aspects of running courses. And you simply have to wonder how you're going to convey all that information between now and the end of semester. The fundamental questions, though, are pretty much contradictory: 'why should the students be interested in what I've got to say?' and 'how much ought I to cater to them?'

One change in my years of teaching, at least at undergraduate level, is that you can't simply assume that students are interested because they have taken the course. Nor can you assume that they'll participate in a way that you can reasonably expect. So part of the teaching-in-higher-education job comes down to explaining to students why they should be more bothered by some issue than they need to be to pass. You also spend your time trying to cajole them into some involvement in their own classes.

Tactics towards the final element in all this are dealt with in the thread started by Chris Bertram over on Crooked Timber. Let the terror of silence begin!

After the Splurge

John Quiggin has a good post over on Crooked Timber discussing the need for the Democrats to put an end to the Iraq debacle as soon as possible. Since a direct motion to end the war probably wouldn't work, Quiggin advocates that Congress repeat the tactic that brought Vietnam to an end: simply stop paying for it.

This leads to a sub-debate in the comments on whether the emerging Vietnam <=> Iraq consensus has any merit. It probably does. Still, I'm concerned at the idea that the ending-the-war options are the same for the Democrats now as they were then. I think that things are much much worse for them this time around. read the rest of this post »

The Terrorists

In entirely other news, Chris Bertram has a great discussion over on Crooked Timber about, as one commenter puts it, glum Nordic detectives. That's my Summer reading sorted. I'd also throw Blackwater by Kerstin Ekman into the ring. What it loses in not being a detective novel it gains in mid-Summer desolation.

And also, like bludgeon, the word glum is just not used enough. I mean, living in Belfast you'd think opportunities to employ these sorts of words would be ten to the penny.

Maria Farrell on the Irish Economy

I see that Maria Farrell has posted some depressing news on the Irish economy over on Crooked Timber. It seems that 2006 final quarter net exports fell 10% year on year, with housing stalling too.1 Even though I'm a person who, to coin Nick Cohen's phrase, has forecast ten out of the last three recessions, I suspect Maria's spot on. An economy reliant on equity-lead consumer demand is in very deep shit indeed.

How deep is a difficult question though. And this question matters very much for Belfast too. read the rest of this post »

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