Search results
31 results, sorted by date
-
Collateral Damage? Latin America and China-US Competition
Collateral Damage? Latin America and China-US Competition
-
As Lockdown Restrictions Start to Ease, It’s Time to Think About Mobility Justice
As Lockdown Restrictions Start to Ease, It’s Time to Think About Mobility Justice
The experience of the pandemic thus opens up a myriad of issues about how mobility is managed. Confronted with new experiences of immobility and confinement, but also with the realization of how globally connected we are across borders, the current moment provides an opportunity to rethink issues of mobility justice – in other words, who gets to move and why.
-
Democracy and US Foreign Policy
Democracy and US Foreign Policy
Panellists discuss the future role of democracy and human rights in America’s foreign policy.
-
Webinar: US Foreign Policy in a Post COVID-19 World
Webinar: US Foreign Policy in a Post COVID-19 World
Tony Blinken discusses the impact of COVID-19 and the 2020 US presidential elections on America’s global role.
-
Avoiding a Virus-Induced Cold War with China
Avoiding a Virus-Induced Cold War with China
Managing relations with China once the COVID-19 crisis abates will be one of the biggest challenges facing political leaders in the United States and Europe – two of the areas worst-hit by the virus that originated in China.
-
Virtual Roundtable: America’s China Challenge
Virtual Roundtable: America’s China Challenge
With Robert Zoellick, former president of the World Bank Group.
-
What’s Missing in the Debate Over Spheres of Influence
What’s Missing in the Debate Over Spheres of Influence
-
Ten Conflicts to Watch in 2020
Ten Conflicts to Watch in 2020
Following a year of protests, extreme politics and the emergence of new and sophisticated security challenges, Robert Malley and Leslie Vinjamuri examine the International Crisis Group’s Ten Conflicts to Watch in 2020.
-
Britain Walks Post-Brexit Tightrope With Huawei Decision
Britain Walks Post-Brexit Tightrope With Huawei Decision
The UK government seems to have balanced competing interests of the economy, national security and relations with America. But the full US response remains to be seen.