AUG 16, 2018 • Podcast
Global Ethics Weekly: Helsinki, Singapore, & the Emerging Trump Doctrine
From the unprecedented Trump-Kim meeting, to what some call a treasonous press conference in Finland, to growing tensions between America and its closest allies, as ...
AUG 16, 2018 • Article
Inexorable Changes in U.S. Foreign Policy?
Is Trump's presidency a brief aberration after which things will return to normal? That's unlikely, argues Nikolas Gvosdev. In addition to disruptions that have already ...
AUG 15, 2018 • Podcast
Banned in China, with Andrew J. Nathan
What's the "anaconda in the chandelier" in China that looms over foreign scholars, journalists, and Chinese citizens expressing their opinions? Find out in this podcast ...
AUG 14, 2018 • Article
The Populist Appeal of American Decline
"Is it possible that, in many circles, the decline of American hegemony is something voters are implicitly cheering?" asks Daniel Graeber of Grand Valley State ...
AUG 14, 2018 • Podcast
Post-Truth, with Lee C. McIntyre
"Post-truth doesn't mean that no one cares about truth, it doesn't mean that there isn't any such thing as truth, it just means that there's ...
AUG 13, 2018 • Article
Ethics, Russia, and Syria
How can Moscow can support a dictator who has used chemical weapons in his desperate attempts to retain power at all costs? And what does ...
AUG 13, 2018 • News
International Student Essay Contest, 2018: Is it Important to Live in a Democracy?
This annual essay contest is open to students of all nationalities anywhere in the world. This year's topic: "Is it Important to Live in a ...
AUG 13, 2018 • Podcast
China's Presence on U.S. Campuses, with Jack Marr
Boise State University's Jack Marr discusses how China's approach to the world has changed, from keeping a low profile to "a great push outward." Last ...