Stephen Hill Linkography: Survival


Greece: Epicenter of the Debt Earthquake?
Posted: 27 November 2010 - La Progressive. Also posted at: How's Europe Doing - The Washington Monthly, 25 November 2010. Unlike the other countries I have visited where “the fear of the crisis has turned out to be worse than the crisis itself” (as one commentator told me), in Greece the impact of the economic crisis has hit like a small tsunami. My colleagues in Athens talk about declines in service, in the quality of health care and other dents in the Greek system that they are experiencing.

Despite the Crisis, Europe Is the Model for the World
Interview in Czech: 23 February 2011 - Lidove Noviny. Czech title : Evropa je i přes krizi pro svět vzorem – 23 února 2011, Lidove Noviny. (Use Google translator). In this exclusive Q&A interview with the prominent Czech newspaper Lidove Noviny, Hill is questioned primarily about his book, the economic policies of the EU, the Euro crisis, prospects for the future of an integrated Europe and more. See also>>

The Greek aftershock - Will it make or break Europe?
Article: February 19, 2010 – Social Europe Journal. After the earthquake come the aftershocks. That is a law of geophysics, and now apparently of economics. Well over a year ago, the world economy suffered a massive economic quake of 8.0 on the Richter scale. Since then different countries have been experiencing a number of aftershocks.

Steven Hill re Europe’s Promise: Q&A
Interview aired (audio): 30 May 2010 - A Terrence McNally Podcast. The European Union, 27 member nations with a half billion people, has become the largest, wealthiest trading bloc in the world. Americans are hearing a lot about the trouble Europe is in. The debt crisis in Greece, and perhaps Spain, Portugal, and Italy, is threatening the Euro and the European Union. What's really going on? How did it happen? How bad is it? How will they deal with it? And what does it mean for the rest of the world and for the US in particular? These are the questions Hill takes on during this lengthy Q&A interview.

Europe and its Revolution - Part 1
Posted in Italian: 30 November 2010 - Europe and its revolution By Francesca Cannino. (Italian original: L’Europa e la sua rivoluzione 1/2, 30 Novembre 2010 – Gli Euros, Par Francesca Cannino (traduttrice) .
Europe and its Revolution - Part 2
Posted in Italian: 13 December 2010 - Europe and its revolution By Francesca Cannino. (Italian original: L’Europa e la sua rivoluzione 2/2, 30 Novembre 2010 – Gli Euros, Par Francesca Cannino (traduttrice) Use Google translator). There is no doubt that Europe can sometimes appear in disarray reeling from one apparent crisis to another. It is facing challenges that seem impossible… Yet in the end, it always gets the job done as is characteristic in a united Europe for the last 60 years.

The Silver Lining of the Greek Debt Crisis
Posted April 7, 2010 - Huffington Post. Greece's debt situation has pundits taking out their crystal balls trying to divine the future not only of Greece, but also the euro and Europe. Every news outlet from the New York Times to National Public Radio has joined the chorus of gloom and doom.

Author Steven Hill on Greece’s debt and the euro
Panel discussion (audio): 15 February 2010 on the BBC World Newshour. Presenter James Menendez discusses Greece’s debt crisis with a panel that includes Steven Hill and Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa, the Italian politician who died a few months after this interview. He was one of the architects of the single European currency.

Podcast interview (audio): 27 May 2010 - Dr. Jackson Janes, American Institute for Contemporary German Studies. Steven Hill and Dr. Janes discuss Hill's book and examine the question: Is Europe too big to fail? They also discuss Europe's ability to weather the Greek crisis, and whether or not Europe has the necessary leaders at the national and European levels to push it into the future.

Dave Ross Show interview with Steven Hill
Talk radio interview (audio): 15 March 2010 - KIRO-AM 710 in Seattle with host Dave Ross. While the effects of the global financial crisis continue to be felt worldwide Hill discusses how Europe has managed to weather the storm better than the US.

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