Help Us Evaluate the Triple Crisis Blog

To mark our first four months, the Triple Crisis Blog wants to take stock of how we’re doing.  And we want your feedback: how do you like the blog, and why do you keep reading?  How well have we tied together the crises in finance, development and environment?  Are there issues we’ve missed?

Please feel free to provide your feedback in the form of comments to this post.

And thanks!

Triple Crisis Blog

4 Responses to “Help Us Evaluate the Triple Crisis Blog”

  1. Mark Thoma says:

    Yes, a full RSS feed!

    I miss a lot of what you do because of the partial feed.

  2. michael says:

    Brand new to the site so I can’t speak about content but…It would be helpful to have a ‘home page’ tab at the top so that when you are in another tab you can easily get back to the blogs on the homepage. I know you can click on the banner and it does this but it took me a while to figure this out.

    Cheers,
    Michael

  3. Marco Moreno says:

    I love and recommend
    the issues are analyzed in depth
    and the authors are very good level
    Regards

  4. Jan Marczona says:

    I especially love the “What we are reading & Writing” bits. What I would recommend though is clear categories. First for the the crisis and then categories for certain types of posts, like “What we read & write”, posts with videos, etc. It would make navigating a lot easier for people like me who do not come to the blog more than every once in a while and try to find a certain kind of post.

    And, I know this one might me huge, I would add a fourth crisis. “Quadruple Crisis” sure as hell sounds less catchy than “Triple Crisis”, but I argue that security at least is perceived in the public debate as another global crisis. With global terrorism, organized crime (drug cartels, human trafficking, piracy etc.) and gang violence (Maras in Central America, Los Zetas in Mexico) taking more and more power especially in territories of limited statehood, the field of security policy poses new problems that can not be left out of sight while dealing with global famine and development.