JUN 1, 2016 • Podcast
An Evaluation of Gender Balance in the Leadership of the UN Secretariat
"We see the UN come out time and time again for a need for gender parity, not only within its organization, but at the state ...
JUN 1, 2016 • News
Two Decades Behind: How to Give Women a Bigger Voice in Japanese Politics
Japan has one of the lowest rates of female representation in politics of any country in the world, writes Pacific Fellow Mari Miura for Nippon....
MAY 31, 2016 • Podcast
The Next Pandemic: On the Front Lines Against Humankind's Gravest Dangers
In over 20 years at the CDC, Dr. Ali Khan battled Ebola, SARS, and other deadly diseases. But, as he reveals in this fascinating talk, what ...
MAY 26, 2016 • Podcast
Return to Cold War
Columbia's Robert Legvold argues that the United States and Russia are, indeed, in a new Cold War with plenty of blame for both sides. And ...
MAY 24, 2016 • Article
The Symbiotic Relationship between Western Media and Terrorism
Mass media and terrorism have become ever more intertwined in a mutually beneficial relationship often described as 'symbiotic.' This column examines that dynamic and ...
MAY 24, 2016 • News
World War III Will be Fought over Water
This excerpt from Journalism Fellow Amrita Gupta's "Policy Innovations" interview with Rajendra Singh, known as the "water man of India," was posted in Quartz.
MAY 23, 2016 • Article
Obama at Hiroshima
The president's visit to Hiroshima to affirm his commitment to a world without nuclear weapons is no doubt a legacy-burnishing gesture, writes Rosenthal. "Yet there ...
MAY 20, 2016 • Podcast
Chuck Hagel on U.S. Challenges in Today's "Complicated, Interconnected World"
Drawing on decades of experience, Secretary Hagel gives a masterly and frank analysis of world events. He discusses current U.S. politics--he's confident that the ...