DEC 4, 2018 • Podcast
Breaking News: The Remaking of Journalism and Why It Matters Now, with Alan Rusbridger
"Were we a business, were we a mission, were we a public service, or were we a profit center?" Alan Rusbridger, former editor-in-chief of "The ...
NOV 29, 2018 • Podcast
Global Ethics Weekly: Women's Employment & Working in a War Zone, with Mariel Davis
Education for Employment's Mariel Davis discusses some of the many issues surrounding women's employment in the Middle East and North Africa, focusing on the story ...
NOV 27, 2018 • Article
Machine-Learning, Climate Change, and Disaster Management in the Philippines
Machine-learning can provide relevant information at the right moment to climate change disaster survivors in the Philippines.
NOV 27, 2018 • Article
Kerch and San Ysidro
What do the events in the Kerch Straits and on the U.S.-Mexico border have in common? In a world that may be shrinking ...
NOV 20, 2018 • Podcast
The Jungle Grows Back: America and Our Imperiled World, with Robert Kagan
"The analogy that is at the heart of this book is about a jungle and a garden," says Robert Kagan. "In order to have a ...
NOV 19, 2018 • News
What the New York Times Got Wrong About North Korea
Carnegie Council Senior Fellow Devin Stewart writes for "The National Interest" about problems that he sees in a "New York Times" report on North Korea's ...
NOV 18, 2018 • News
Machine-Learning, Climate Change, and Disaster Management in the Philippines
Carnegie Council Pacific Delegate Chetan Peddada writes for "The Diplomat" about the Asia Dialgoues trip to the Philippines, led by Senior Fellow Devin Stewart, to ...
NOV 16, 2018 • Podcast
Myanmar and the Plight of the Rohingya, with Elliott Prasse-Freeman
The Rohingya are seen as fundamentally 'other,' says Prasse-Freeman. "Hence, even if they have formal citizenship, they wouldn't really be accepted as citizens, as ...