DEC 18, 2016 • News
Japan and education: a victim of its own success?
Recent university rankings results provide some much-needed discomfort in Japan, says Carnegie Council Senior Fellow Devin Stewart in Times Higher Education of London.
DEC 16, 2016 • Podcast
Against Empathy: The Case for Rational Compassion
We often think that empathy, our capacity "to feel someone's pain," is the ultimate source of goodness. Nothing could be farther from the truth, argues ...
DEC 15, 2016 • Podcast
Global Ethics Forum Preview: Terrorism and "Rogue Justice" with Karen Greenberg
Next time on Global Ethics Forum, Fordham Law's Karen Greenberg discusses ISIS in Europe and America and ways to counter violent extremism. In this excerpt, ...
DEC 15, 2016 • Podcast
A Conversation on Effective Altruism with Jennifer Rubenstein
The term effective altruism means that individuals should be sure to maximize the good they do, by donating to the most cost-effective charities, for example, ...
DEC 15, 2016 • Podcast
Risks to U.S.-China Relations Under Trump
Where are U.S.-China relations right now and where are they headed? "I don't think we should give up hope in some way forward. ...
DEC 14, 2016 • News
"Ethics & International Affairs" Winter 2016 Issue
This issue includes an essay on the UN Refugee Agency's #IBelong Campaign to eradicate statelessness; a feature on the expressivist potential of international criminal courts; ...
DEC 14, 2016 • News
Castro's Legacy in Puerto Rico
There were few causes closer to Fidel Castro's heart, writes Carnegie Council Senior Fellow Zach Dorfman in Foreign Affairs, than the status of Puerto Rico. ...
DEC 12, 2016 • Podcast
Foreign Fighters, Homegrown Terrorism, and the Prevention of Violent Extremism
What are the driving forces behind the increase in homegrown terrorism and what can be done to stop it? Ali Soufan and Seamus Hughes, veterans ...