Our Podcasts

Listen to the latest insights from Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs. Tune in to hear from leading experts and thinkers, identifying and addressing the most critical ethical issues of today and tomorrow.

NOV 9, 2016 Journal Online Exclusive

Clustering Countries, Changing Climates: An NGO Review to Close the Ambition Gap

The bottom-up element of the Paris Agreement has led to a substantial mismatch between the sum of individual countries’ proposed emissions cuts and the collective ...

Detail from book cover

NOV 7, 2016 Podcast

What is Populism?

There's a wave of populist leaders around the world right now, from Erdoğan to Trump. What defines a populist exactly, and why are they ...

NOV 5, 2016 Journal Online Exclusive

The Ethical Risks of Delay

Shadi Hamid. CREDIT: Amanda Ghanooni

NOV 4, 2016 Podcast

Islamic Exceptionalism: How the Struggle over Islam Is Reshaping the World

Many liberals hope that Islam will follow the same trajectory as Christianity and the West: a reformation and eventually secularization. But we should beware of ...

NOV 3, 2016 Podcast

Global Ethics Forum Preview: New Paradigms for Refugee Camps and Humanitarian Aid with Kilian Kleinschmidt

Next time on Global Ethics Forum, Kilian Kleinschmidt, the former head of the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan, discusses a new paradigm for humanitarian aid. ...

OCT 25, 2016 Journal Online Exclusive

CETA, Local Democracy, and the Liberal Order

CETA--the Canada/EU free trade agreement--is now on political life support. The multiyear effort to craft a common market across the Atlantic and to strengthen ...

OCT 25, 2016 Journal Online Exclusive

Does the United Nations have a real feminist in the next Secretary-General, António Guterres?

António Guterres has made good on his commitments to advance gender equality both in his government and at the United Nations Agency for Refugees. ...

Victor D. Cha. CREDIT: Amanda Ghanooni

OCT 25, 2016 Podcast

Powerplay: The Origins of the American Alliance System in Asia

Why is there no NATO for Asia? After World War II, why did the United States opt for bilateral relationships with countries like Japan and ...

Ok Tedi Mine in Papua New Guinea. CREDIT: <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:OkTediMine.jpg">Ok Tedi Mine CMCA Review</a>

OCT 24, 2016 Podcast

Managing Resource Conflict with a Human Rights Approach

Earth Institute research scientist Joshua Fisher explores the links between natural resource management, conflict, and climate change in this conversation with Senior Fellow Devin Stewart. ...

CREDIT: <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Panthera_tigris_corbetti_(Tierpark_Berlin)_832-714-(118).jpg">Lotse/Wikimedia</a>

OCT 21, 2016 Podcast

China, Japan, and America: Three Tigers on One Mountain?

"I don't think you can write about China and Japan without writing also about the United States," says journalist Richard McGregor. How has this complicated ...