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Criticism of capitalism

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  • Large group of women in Bangladeshi attire gathered together outside
    Bangladesh's low-wage textile industry

    Microcredits – no silver bullet against poverty

    While Grameen Bank, the great role model for the microfinance industry, is celebrating its fortieth birthday in 2023, tens of thousands of textile workers in Bangladesh are taking to the streets and striking for better wages

  • For leading economist Yazid Sayegh, the cause of Egypt's current economic and financial lies primarily in the government's policy of excessive borrowing. He also criticises the way German and European politicians handle the Sisi regime.
    Economic crisis in Egypt

    Debt on the Nile

    For leading economist Yazid Sayegh, the cause of Egypt's current economic and financial crisis lies primarily in the government's policy of excessive borrowing. He also criticises the way German and European politicians handle the Sisi regime. Interview by Mahmoud Hussein

  • Sufis today are under attack from fundamentalists and modernists alike. At the same time, a new form of Sufism is emerging in the West.
    The future of Islamic mysticism

    Is Sufism under threat?

    Sufis today are under attack from fundamentalists and modernists alike. At the same time, a new form of Sufism is emerging in the West. By Marian Brehmer

  • Qatar

    How Qatar turns its cash into foreign policy power

    For years, Qatar has pursued a "soft" foreign policy that helped make international friends and influence the powerful. It includes spending billions on everything from fashion, art and sport, to charities and industry. By Cathrin Schaer

  • All organisers use major sporting events like this year’s FIFA World Cup in Qatar primarily to burnish their own image. But, we don't have to buy into that, writes Samuli Schielke.
    FIFA World Cup 2022

    Major events at any price?

    All organisers use major sporting events like this year’s FIFA World Cup in Qatar primarily to advertise their country and promote a slick public image. This is not something we need to be involved in, writes Samuli Schielke in his commentary

  • At the Abu Dhabi Book Fair, the problems of the Arab book market and Arab literature were discussed with astonishing frankness. The book fair has also become an international event, on a scale not seen since the Arab revolutions.
    Abu Dhabi Book Fair

    Arabic literature, criticism and commerce

    These days, at the Abu Dhabi Book Fair, the problems of the Arab book market and Arab literature are discussed with astonishing frankness. It has also become an international event – on a scale not seen since the Arab revolutions. Stefan Weidner reports from Abu Dhabi

  • Saudi Arabia's urban development

    The Crown Prince's bulldozers

    Entire neighbourhoods in the Saudi coastal metropolis of Jeddah are being razed to the ground. Tens of thousands of people are losing their homes. With a marina and Saudi Arabia's first opera house, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman hopes to create a global urban brand worthy of Dubai or Singapore. By Jannis Hagmann

  • Indian farmers protest in Mumbai.
    India's farmers vs. Narendra Modi

    "Modi and the BJP are destroying the country"

    In India, hundreds of thousands of farmers are fighting doggedly against laws passed by Narendra Modi’s government to liberalise agriculture. In a nationwide campaign, more than forty farmers’ organisations have called on Indian voters to deny the ruling BJP party their votes in future elections. Dominik Muller reports

  • Charlotte Wiedemann: "Now is the time for utopias"

    The end of white dominance

    In her latest book – "Der lange Abschied von der weissen Dominanz" – recently published in German, journalist Charlotte Wiedemann describes the upheaval in our changing, multi-polar world with startling clarity. By Christopher Resch

  • Interview with Islamic scholar Stefan Weidner

    Thinking outside the Western box

    In interview with Rachid Boutayeb, Stefan Weidner complains that even the most critical thinkers of Western tradition have practically never looked beyond their Western horizons. Islam, Indian religions and philosophies of non-European cultures are virtually absent from this thinking

  • Interview with filmmaker Mariam Ghani

    The power of propaganda

    In "What We Left Unfinished", Afghan-Lebanese-American filmmaker Mariam Ghani discusses the forgotten era of Afghan Communism and its ties to arts, culture and propaganda. Interview by Emran Feroz

  • Interview with Indonesian economist Iwan J. Azis

    "Inequality will grow if all you do is unleash market forces"

    For decades the conditions governing International Financial Institution (IFI) loans to Asian countries were often far too stringent, resulting in heightened social disparity. In interview with Hans Dembowski, Iwan J. Azis explains the risks of purely growth-oriented economies

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