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c/o The European Institute 1001 Connecticut Avenue
NW, Suite 220
Washington, DC
20036-5531
Tel: (202) 895-1670
Fax (202) 362-1088
info@europeanaffairs.org |
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Immigration
Transatlantic Contradictions on Immigration
Kathleen Newland, Director and Board Member, Migration Policy Institute
American and European social models show a contrasting interrelation between immigration and labor-market flexibility. U.S.
policy is to bar immigrant access to the public welfare system and open the labor market wide to them. Europe does the
opposite, especially for asylum seekers.
Europe: Immigration Unwanted
Catherine Wihtol de Wenden, Director of Research, CNRS (CERI), Paris
EU countries are becoming “nations of immigrants” – despite themselves and without
wanting to be. The fast growth (and assertiveness) of Islam in Europe is a challenging
complication. Many remedies are being tried, but the right policy mix (and
mainstream political consensus) is proving elusive for the European Union.
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Polish Migrants to Britain: Pros and Cons
As a special case of immigration, flows inside Europe – from “new” EU countries in
the east to richer, older EU member states – continue to increase in defiance of
predictions that they would level off. They arouse political tensions blamed for
contributing to popular distrust of the EU in Western Europe. To illuminate this
situation, a case study offers four contrasting views, pro and con, from Polish and
British sources.
Emigration Is Good News for Poland
Piotr Gillert, U.S. Correspondent, Rzeczpospolita, Polish daily
The “Polish plumber” may be a bogyman for Western trade unions. For Poles,
he represents an investment in the future of Poland. And emigration involves
a less definitive break nowadays.
Britain’s Problems Are Worsened by Massive Immigration
Migrationwatch UK
This web statement by a British private group leery of immigration, warns
that immigration trends are out of control. Immigrants may add to national
economic growth, but in proportion to population growth, the benefit to the
host community is small. Cultural identity is eroding in some areas.
Poles Help Bring Prosperity to Britain
James Harding, Business Editor,ge Times, London
These immigrants have helped Britain enjoy a huge increase in its labor
market, certainly in its flexibility, without making inflation boil up, because
they help tamp wage increases. The indirect benefits of cultural diversity are
too ofen overlooked.
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Is It Time for TAFTA? Or What?
A Conversation with Robert Zoellick, Managing Director and Chairman,
International Advisers Department, Goldman Sachs
With the Doha round in the doldrums and prospects dimming for any further
breakthrough on global trade liberalization, discussion is suddenly heating up about
an ofen-mooted, never adopted idea: a Transatlantic Free Trade Area (TAFTA).ge
former U.S. Trade Representative dissects what different ideas people have in mind. In
his view, the Transatlantic economic tissue is already so dense it requires a more
sophisticated treatment.
TAFTA Could Work Like an "Economic NATO"
Excerpts from War for Wealth: The Global Grab for Power and
Prosperity by Gabor Steingart
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Nuclear Rising on Both Sides of the Atlantic
John Ritch, Director General, World Nuclear Association
Energy security tops the list of national concerns in many countries, but the problems
are di`erent on opposite sides of the Atlantic. The U.S. worries about oil to fuel its
cars and trucks. Europe worries about natural gas for its electricity and heating –
much of it, gas from Russia. Both the EU and the U.S., at least recently, also worry
about cleaner energy to slow global warming. There is no realistic prospect to meet
the demand for more, cleaner energy without much greater reliance on nuclear
energy, says advocate Ritch.
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Berlin’s EU Presidency: No Rabbits in German Hat
Dr. Andreas Rinke, Deputy Chief, Berlin OUce, Handelsblatt
Germany takes on the six-month mandate amid a chill in support for the European
project, reform fatigue and widespread doubts about any further enlargement.
Realistically, Chancellor Merkel's team has tried to lower expectations about how
much can be accomplished in 2007. Crises outside Europe may impose a more
ambitious agenda. U.S. ties, especially on trade, will matter.
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On Iran, Europeans Decide to Work in Concert
Charles A. Kupchan, Professor of international aTairs, Georgetown University
Afer the failure of the EU constitution and the deep wounds opened in Europe and
across the Atlantic by the invasion of Iraq, European leaders needed an initiative to
unite them. So their diplomacy concerns the future of Europe as much as it does the
nuclear question in Iran.
This Time Europe Got its Act Together
Daniel Vernet, Correspondent, Le Monde, Paris
By creating the “EU-3” model for dealing with Iran, Europe has invented a form of
variable geometry that may prove useful in future crises. In this case, time may be
running out: France, particularly robust against nuclear proliferation, is alarmed by
the rise of Iranian-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon as a threat to French interests.
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What Kind of Foreign Policy under “PrimeMinister Gordon Brown”?
James P. Rubin, Commentator, Sky News television, London
Brown will not want to be seen jumping to do the White House’s bidding – unlike his
predecessor. But he has not taken a great interest in global political a`airs and will not
have the wish (or the means) to break the dense web of special relations and shared
assumptions between London andWashington.
"New Conservative" Cameron: Rooted in the Atlantic Alliance
Maurice Fraser, Fellow in European Politics, London School of Economics
and Political Science
Cameron has scant experience in diplomacy or defense, and his instincts and political
calculations will incline him to see eye to eye with U.S. leaders. He is more cautious
about foreign interventions than Tony Blair has been. But he shares the prevailing
conservative sense, in London and in Washington that the world is becoming an
increasingly dangerous place.
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French-U.S. Relations: Sarkozy Has a Fresh Take
Nicolas Sarkozy
France’s Presidential Candidate Nicolas Sarkozy delivered a speech in Washington in
which he pointedly distanced himself from the tone and actions of disapproval of
overall U.S. policy that has been shown by the current French government (in which
Sarkozy is interior minister). His main criticism: too ofen, French policy seems
designed to discomfit Washington, not contribute constructively to solving problems.
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Canada: Soft Power Won’t Do It in Afghanistan – or Darfur
David Wright, Kenneth and Patricia Taylor Distinguished Visiting Professor in Foreign ATairs, Victoria College, University of Toronto
While the U.S. war in Iraq is wrong-headed and even illegitimate, Afghanistan is a totally
di`erent challenge because the United Nations has pledged to help that nation rebuild
from civil wars and occupation. Reconstruction requires security, which can only be
supplied by military force. If the UN starts enforcing its rules that governments have a
responsibility to protect their citizens, itmay have to intervene in Darfur – with force.
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European Affairs 1001 Connecticut Avenue NW Suite 220
Washington, DC 20036-5531 Tel: (202) 895-1670 Fax (202) 362-1088info@europeanaffairs.org
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