Summary
On June 15, 2020, Indian and Chinese troops engaged in a brawl that left twenty Indian soldiers dead while causing an unspecified number of Chinese casualties. The clash is a part of a broader border standoff along the Galwan River between the two forces on the Line of Actual Control that is yet to be resolved. The Indian strategic community is broadly in agreement that this border dispute marks an implacable decline in India-China ties. They argue that the very basis of relations that emerged after former Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi’s visit to Beijing in 1988 has been shaken, if not destroyed. Yet, how did the two countries manage to reach this nadir in ties, and furthermore, what does the Galwan clash signify for the future of Sino-Indian relations?
Michelle Visage teams up with Steps for massive pop anthem Heartbreak In This City
Michelle Visage has joined Steps as their unofficial sixth member.
The Seduction songstress and Drag Race host has collaborated with the chart-topping quintet for the remix of their song Heartbreak In This City.
The pop anthem, which sees the group reunite with their Deeper Shade of Blue songwriter Karl Twigg, has been a fan-favourite ever since the release of Steps’ sixth studio album, What the Future Holds.
In a statement, Michelle gushed: “To say that I’m honoured to record a song with pop icons STEPS is the understatement of the year.”
Drag Race legend Michelle Visage joins Steps to release new single pinknews.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pinknews.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Written by Tom Walker on February 15, 2021
This Wednesday, February 17 at 9am, our first guest will be scientist
Marc Zimmer from the University of Connecticut who will talk about a book he’s writing for teens on
Our second guest will be
Tom Webb, an adjunct professor at the Sobey School of Business at Saint Mary’s University in Canada. Tom will talk about his blog
Richard N. Cooper, Harvard economist and adviser to presidents, dies at 86
By Globe Staff and Wire ReportsUpdated February 3, 2021, 7:29 p.m.
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Dr. Cooper served n four presidential administrations.Cooper family
With his 1968 book âThe Economics of Interdependenceâ and his other writings of that period, economist Richard N. Cooper promoted cooperation among nations, even when doing so required considerable effort.
âThe trend toward greater economic interdependence among countries will require substantial changes in their approach to foreign policy in the next decade or so,â he wrote in a 1972 article for the journal World Politics.
His publications on the topic can be seen as âthe original foundation of the study of international cooperation or coordination of macroeconomic policy,â Jeffrey A. Frankel a friend and a Harvard Kennedy School professor, wrote recently in an online tribute to Dr. Cooper.