Contents, Volume 9 #1

March/April 1991


Dossier

Glasnost and
the Global Village

What does change in
the Soviet Union
mean for the world?

Leader
Glasnost faces an uncertain future. Curtis Fahey (p.2)

The Politics of Glasnost
A society made of quicksand. Joseph Schull (p.6)
Stormy process of democratization. Boris Pyadyshev
Women suffer double discrimination. Olga Lipovskaya
The era of the nation-state is over. Paul Magocsi

Perestroika and Free Markets (p.16)
The human rights dilemma. Erich Weingartner
Management mentalities must change. Bagrat Edilian
Forcing free markets on the USSR. Tracy Johnstone

The Religious Renewal (p.23)
Homo Soveticus at the well. Mark O'Connor
Rebuilding Orthodoxy from the ruins. Andrei Lorgus
Pluralism's painful birth. Myroslaw Tataryn
Islam: From survival to revival. K.M. Moldobayev
Can a Jew stay in the Soviet Union? Samuel Kassow

Boris, Gleb and the Long-Suffering Slavs
Is the spirit of glasnost the same spirit that led two brothers to give up their lives?
Joe Mróz SJ (p.33)

Environmental and Global Implications (p.34)
Ecological glasnost. Joan DeBardeleben
Roots of environmentalism. Vladislav Gorokhov
A global ecology movement. Anatol Rapoport
An East-West bridge. Christopher Zakrzewski
A world without walls. Yassen Zazursky
Third World paths to reform. Eric Hamovitch


Music
Rock and Roll Always Lives
The rise of rock culture in Soviet Ukraine reveals much about youth, language and politics.
Romana Bahry and Alexander Rudiachenko (p.45)


Article
Newfoundland's Pain and Anger
Can shame and disillusionment be turned into a creative force for change?
Bobbie Boland (p.51)


Books
Trudeau and Our Times
By Stephen Clarkson and Christina McCall.
Pirouette
By J.L. Granatstein and Robert Bothwell.
The Outsider
By Michel Vastel
Reviewed by Rae Murphy and Robert Chodos (p.55)

Five Books on War
Reviewed by Gilbert Drolet (p.59)

Sight Lines: Looking at Architecture and Design in Canada
By Adele Freedman. Reviewed by Gregory Caicco (p.26)


Features
Colloquy
The experience of exile pervades our world. Mary Ellen Sheehan IHM (p.50)

Disputatio
Links between psychology and spirituality deserve more attention. John Veltri SJ (p.66)

Testament
If Jesus wept, surely he must have smiled. Joseph B. Gavin (p.67)

Letters
Psychological distractions and mathematical addictions. (p.4)

Points
Occupation in Lebanon and having it all. (p.5)

Compass Cryptic
Reversal of nausea and backwards from the bar. (p.29)



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© 1996 Compass, A Jesuit Journal and Gail van Varseveld