A curated selection of public diplomacy-relevant news from a global cross-section of English-language media outlets, including independent, corporate-owned, and state-sponsored sources. The stories featured don't necessarily represent CPD's views nor have they been verified by CPD.

Malala Yousafzai Tops List Of Most Powerful Asians In The UK

Malala Yousafzai has topped a list of the 101 most powerful British Asians and Asians resident in the UK, knocking Labour MP Keith Vaz off the number one spot he held last year. Yousafzai, who came to Britain from Pakistan after she was shot in the head by the Taliban for campaigning for girls’ education, is the only woman to feature in the top ten.

Tags: pakistan, united kingdom, women, diaspora, influence, malala yousafzai, asian media and markering group

Taliban Kill Six Literacy Workers In Afghanistan: Officials

Taliban militants gunned down and killed six people in Afghanistan working on a government-backed literacy project in the northern province of Faryab, officials said on Wednesday. The insurgent group is stepping up attacks on state workers ahead of presidential elections due in April 2014, fanning security concerns as foreign troops prepare to withdraw from the country by the end of next year.

Tags: afghanistan, terrorism, elections, taliban, conflict, literacy, charity

Nicaragua Issues Politically Charged Anti-Drug Ops Invitation

Nicaragua has authorized the militaries of the United States and Russia to undertake drug interdiction in Caribbean waters successfully claimed from Colombia in the International Court of Justice last year, in a move likely spurred by political motivations.

Tags: united states, russia, foreign policy, military diplomacy, colombia, caribbean, nicaragua, counternarcotics, international court of justice

Criticism Of China’s ADIZ Increases; Japanese Airlines Do A Policy U-Turn

Several governments joined Japan Tuesday in criticizing China’s latest bid to carve out a zone of control in the East China Sea, including Australia summoning Beijing’s ambassador to voice opposition over the move.

Tags: china, australia, japan, foreign policy, east china sea, air defense identification zone

El Pais Launches Brazilian Website

With the launch of a Portuguese-language internet edition on Tuesday, EL PAÍS has embarked on what is probably its biggest professional and business venture since the newspaper was founded 37 years ago. The Spanish daily has always had the vision of becoming a global newspaper, something that was proved in March when it launched an Americas edition. Now the Portuguese internet portal, EL PAÍS Brasil, broadens that scope.

Tags: media, language, brazil, journalism, spain, spanish, newspaper, portuguese, el pais

Culture Posts: Public Diplomacy In The Ancient World

Congratulations are in order for CPD as Jay Wang took the helm this fall and began engaging with the public diplomacy community as the new CPD director. As often happens with such beginnings, the focus intuitively turns to the future. I would like to suggest a counter-intuitive move and challenge public diplomacy scholars around the world to explore the contributions of ancient heritages to the practice of public diplomacy.

Tags: china, vietnam, greece, history, r.s. zaharna, byzantine empire, mayan, new diplomacy, ancient

Digital Diplomacy Spreads Through Washington

The Canadian embassy in Washington, D.C., opened its doors last week to the city’s digital diplomats for an event where they could brag about their use of social media and pick up some tips. A dozen embassies and international organizations, including the World Bank and European Union delegation, participated in the “Digital Diplomacy Open House” that was held in partnership with the Digital Diplomacy Coalition.

Tags: united states, social media, twitter, canada, facebook, digital diplomacy, embassies, connect2canada

A Divided Rio de Janiero, Overreaching For The World

The bumpy ride in the rickety van heads up the steep hill into Morro da Providência, this city’s oldest favela. Last stop: a small, silent square with a hardware shop, bar and pair of young policemen in armored gear toting machine guns, patrolling the still-unopened cable-car station that the city has recently built. The port spreads out below. Spurred by two looming mega-events — the World Cup next year and the Summer Olympics in 2016 — local officials are struggling to reinvent this onetime third-world city with a first-world economy.

Tags: nation branding, brazil, economy, city branding, south america, poverty, rio de janeiro, 2016 Rio Olympics, 2014 fifa world cup

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