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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2015) 32 (3): 41–45.
Published: 01 September 2015
... from cookbooks and then just became really interested in it. And I have this thing where if I do something, I have to do it all the way, so then I decided if I want to be really good at this I’m going to have to start working in restaurants, and that’s kind how that gradually started. WPJ: How...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2015) 32 (3): 33–40.
Published: 01 September 2015
...Ronald Ranta © World Policy Institute 2015 2015 World Policy Institute JERUSALEM—When wandering around Israel, one’s first impression is colored by the country’s food—from restaurants and food stalls, to billboards and souvenir shops. In fact, one of Israel’s most recognized postcards...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2015) 32 (3): 19–24.
Published: 01 September 2015
... been for 37-year-old René Redzepi, and his extraordinary restaurant Noma in Copenhagen. Voted four times as the best restaurant in the world, most recently last year, it is now en route to becoming an empire, staffed by more than a hundred people, a state-of-the-art food laboratory next door, and now...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2015) 32 (2): 40–52.
Published: 01 June 2015
... in the petroleum industry, believing they must have embezzled all the profit at the expense of the environment, and of people’s health. They can hardly breathe under the smog-smothered sky. Such an environmental crisis is not in the Party’s interests.” When they part outside the restaurant, Chen realizes...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2004) 21 (1): 96–101.
Published: 01 March 2004
... have encouraged the through Lithuania to the isolated Russian renovation of old structures, so that new port of Kaliningrad; it seeks official status restaurants and hotels sprout even within for the Russian language in Estonia and the cloistered walls of a fourteenth-century Latvia; it is wary...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2015) 32 (3): 26–31.
Published: 01 September 2015
... we do not waste that precious energy, con- generate waste in restaurants and homes. verting excess intake to muscle, or storing it A common thread unites these dis- as fat. Just as the human body has evolved to parate causes of waste—underpinned by store food, cultural...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2015) 32 (2): 105–111.
Published: 01 June 2015
... political cartoons showing israelis as terrorists and murderers, as well as disturbing photographs of dead children. “Don’t worry about him; he’s paranoid,” sniffs Czech kosher restaurant owner Aaron Günsberger, a few steps away from the Staranovà Sinagoga, commenting on the security guard’s...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2018) 35 (2): 47–55.
Published: 01 June 2018
... develop his oratorical skills. AFTER GRADUATION, ERDOĞAN WORKED AT A RESTAURANT IN BEYOĞLU, WHERE HE BECAME FAMOUS FOR HIS TRIPE SOUPS In the latter half of the 20th century, the secular state made life for imams particularly difficult. After a 1960 coup, generals attempted to close religious...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2015) 32 (3): 1–2.
Published: 01 September 2015
... charnel house to democracy over the past four decades. Our Anatomy feature examines the world’s thinnest and fattest peoples. Then, we welcome to our first of two Chat Rooms Chef René Redzepi, creator of Copenhagen’s extraordinary Noma, named four times as the world’s greatest restaurant, who reflects...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2015) 32 (4): 37–49.
Published: 01 December 2015
... substantially for licenses and taxes as high as 50 percent of profits. They also face considerable hurdles in supplying their ventures, since Cuba lacks a wholesale market for goods such as food supplies for private restaurants. One woman, Yasmina, who runs her own paladar , Atelier, in the Vedado neighborhood...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2003) 20 (2): 51–60.
Published: 01 June 2003
... by the nostalgia Stones tour of China. craze that has led to the recent opening of Are these signs of a cultural awakening? so many restaurants and nightspots with What significance does it have, more gener­ 1930s themes. Another reason to look back­ ally, that national as well...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (1): 52–59.
Published: 01 March 2011
... to feed everyone, while shopping often involves trips to a host of public and Catholic institutions providing aid, money, and basic necessities. Every now and then, someone finds a petty job and earns some cash. One of her grandsons just found a job cleaning dishes in a restaurant for €500 a month. He...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2017) 34 (1): 100–106.
Published: 01 March 2017
... in the sweltering kitchen of a popular restaurant and began sending money back home. Then, in 1999, she just disappeared. With her family hundreds of miles away, it took days for them to realize she was gone and to file a missing persons report. The police conducted only a perfunctory investigation, and, over...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2004) 20 (4): 63–73.
Published: 01 December 2004
... against the ip k f . But then, in in restaurants. Indeed, almost all the Tamil 1995, he fell foul of the boss. Perhaps he men I met in Switzerland worked in the harbored thoughts of the top job, or perhaps catering business. That was where, when Prabhakaran was nervous of his growing they first...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2013) 30 (1): 95–103.
Published: 01 March 2013
... security guards. Now, Ryvkin is planning to emigrate to the United States and sees no signs of progress, or even hope, in Russia. As soon as a person wants to develop himself professionally, insurmountable obstacles arise. “In Russia, we see progress only in entertainment, but I can’t live in a restaurant...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2003) 20 (2): 95–101.
Published: 01 June 2003
..., the legendary tions on the properties of heat, among (French-born) chef at Delmonico’s, the lead­ which was the recipe for omelette surprise, ing restaurant of New York in the nine­ which used egg whites to insulate ice cream. teenth century. As a celebration of the pur­ Inspired by Rumford’s work...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2014) 31 (4): 38–42.
Published: 01 December 2014
... in every Scottish hotel, restaurant, or coffee shop. No doubt some are in kilts playing the bagpipes for tourists, too. And the mindset is different. Nicola Sturgeon has become Scotland’s first woman first minister, naming a cabinet with as many women as men. In another sharp contrast to the rest...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (3): 22–34.
Published: 01 September 2011
... in Europe. Open-minded solutions are needed for what I call the “architecture for enriching interaction.” Key questions need to be asked. How does Otaniemi create forums for enriching interaction, from coffee shops and restaurants to activities that bring people together? We need to open up our way...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (2): 21–33.
Published: 01 June 2011
... confused with the working poor,” he says, sitting at the restaurant of one of Monrovia’s few high-end hotels. “I don’t think a security guard earning $60 a month can be called middle class, when one bag of rice could cost him $40. There’s no way to support a family there.” While Liberty would like to pay...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2012) 29 (4): 27–38.
Published: 01 December 2012
... a TEDx conference, a global speaker series that claimed, “the Somali diaspora is returning home and starting businesses.” New projects—restaurants, hotels, hospitals, schools—are just beginning to get underway, says the UN’s Kleinschmidt, and Turkey is perfectly positioned to grab shares in them before...
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