OCT 16, 2013 • News
The Benefits of a "de-Americanized" World
In this Reuters piece, Zachary Karabell reflects on the potential benefits of the U.S. decline from its position as a global hegemon. Could the ...
OCT 10, 2013 • Podcast
Anna Stilz on Occupancy Rights
Any attempts to tackle the problems of long-term refugees will have to address occupancy rights. Why do we have the right to live in a ...
OCT 10, 2013 • News
Leveson Press Regulation Latest: Reactions
Senior fellow David Speedie was asked by "The Drum" to weigh in on the current debate in the UK over regulating the press industry. The ...
OCT 9, 2013 • Podcast
Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes to War
We should break free of the cliché that World War I was futile, argues Max Hastings. "Germany in 1914, as ruled by the Kaiser and his ...
OCT 9, 2013 • News
Crisis Management
In this piece for "Foreign Policy," Zachary Karabell, vice chairman of the Carnegie Council board of trustees, reflects on Janet Yellen's unenviable task of succeeding ...
OCT 8, 2013 • News
Why No One Talks about the Root Causes of Corruption in India
In this piece for "The Economic Times," Global Ethics Fellow Rajeev Gowda calls for reform of India's campaign finance laws. India's "farcically low" election expenditure ...
OCT 7, 2013 • Podcast
Important Choices: Foreign Policy and Defense Spending
How much does the U.S. actually spend on defense and where does that money go? Lawrence Korb, an expert on the federal budget, the ...
OCT 4, 2013 • Podcast
The Road to War: Presidential Commitments Honored and Betrayed
The last declaration of war authorized by Congress was World War II, yet the U.S. has been entangled in many wars since. Why have ...