All The Monitor's View
- A light shines on Nigerian corruptionDays of mass protests have the potential to turn Africa鈥檚 largest economy toward clean governance.
- A 'Club Med' of peaceful petrostates?More nations in the eastern Mediterranean are cooperating to tap offshore oil and gas despite Turkey鈥檚 belligerence. Latest example: talks between Israel and Lebanon over a maritime border.
- Remedies for a global recession? That鈥檚 the idea.Economists wonder why the pandemic鈥檚 economic effects are not as severe as they expected. Every global downturn has spawned new and practical solutions.
- It takes a city to protect treesCommunities thrive when they protect city trees against climate change.
- A new resiliency lens in ending hungerThe World Food Program not only deserves this year鈥檚 Nobel Peace Prize for its efforts against a pandemic-driven surge in hunger, it also deserves a nod for its new view of individuals in distress.聽
- The noble harmony behind peace prizesNot all recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize make peacemaking look easy. Yet most do assume harmony is an assured norm.
- Concern for the election, diligence from votersEarly signs from mass mail-in voting show states and voters are being civic-minded about the integrity of the process.
- A peace pact鈥檚 surprise in ColombiaConfessions of assassinations and kidnappings by former rebel leaders help keep truth-telling at the center of a postwar process of reconciliation.
- The pandemic鈥檚 bloom of startupsApplications for new businesses are way up in the U.S., a sign of creative and courageous entrepreneurship that defies the social isolation and gloom.
- Why Trump鈥檚 detractors wish him wellAs in modern warfare, more of today鈥檚 politics accepts the principle that even a fallen opponent deserves health care.
- The Arab pinch on Palestinians to uniteIsrael鈥檚 new ties with two Arab nations help push Hamas and Fatah toward holding an election that the Palestinian cause needs.
- An apology ricochets in the KoreasLong portrayed as infallible, North Korea鈥檚 leader apologizes for the killing of a South Korean. His move from myth-making to truth-telling opens a door for peace.
- Why a candidate鈥檚 age matters lessFar more Americans see the older age of the presidential contenders as an asset than those who don鈥檛. Society is getting wise to those with wisdom.
- War in the Caucasus as a window on what brings peaceA serious eruption of violence between Armenia and Azerbaijan is a test for the idea that democracies are less inclined to use war to distract from domestic woes.
- An embrace of law to curb China鈥檚 bullyingThe Philippines has joined a chorus of nations asserting international law over Beijing鈥檚 claims to remote islands.
- Finding justice for Breonna TaylorLike other cities following police violence, Louisville is relying on a local desire for social harmony and justice to drive needed reforms.
- An ideal of innocence kept aliveThe U.N. doctrine of preventing atrocities has faltered since its adoption 15 years ago. But two cases show the principle endures.
- Teaching America鈥檚 past with a common goalDifferent approaches to U.S. history 鈥 from President Trump鈥檚 to The New York Times鈥 1619 Project 鈥 share the same future: instilling critical thinking skills for citizenship.
- Picking a court justice without hardball tacticsBoth James Madison and Ruth Bader Ginsburg had advice about majorities violating the golden rule.
- An oil giant鈥檚 epiphany on climate changeBP鈥檚 slow shift to clean energy since the Deepwater Horizon spill is picking up speed, perhaps setting an example for the petroleum industry.