
clarifying the “Nuclear Deal”
The Huffington Post published commentary by William O. Beeman, professor of anthropology at the University of Minnesota, clarifying the U.S. role in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), nicknamed the “Iran Nuclear Deal.” He writes: “Iran is on solid ground in claiming its right to nuclear development…Foremost, the United States government has no authority to interpret the NPT [Nuclear Proliferation Treaty], an international treaty, on its own with no input or ratification from the other nearly 200 signatories. Aside from that, however, if Washington takes the position that Iran does not have the right to enrich uranium under the NPT, it is acting unilaterally and is uncoordinated with its allies and with the very organizations it cites on this policy…”
book review and author interview

The Sunday Times (South Africa) carried a review of a new book, The Truth about Crime, by Jean Comaraff, Alfred North Whitehead Professor of African and African American Studies and of Anthropology at Harvard University, and John Comaroff, professor of African and African American Studies and of Anthropology at Harvard University, along with a brief interview with the two authors. The reviewer says: “In this book, renowned anthropologists Jean and John L. Comaroff make a startling but absolutely convincing claim about our modern era: it is not by our arts, our politics, or our science that we understand ourselves – it is by our crimes. Surveying an astonishing range of forms of crime and policing – from petty thefts to the multibillion-dollar scams of too-big-to-fail financial institutions to the collateral damage of war – they take readers into the disorder of the late modern world. Looking at recent transformations in the triangulation of capital, the state, and governance that have led to an era where crime and policing are ever more complicit, they offer a powerful meditation on the new forms of sovereignty, citizenship, class, race, law, and political economy of representation that have arisen.”











An article in Japan Today 


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