JUN 24, 2013 • Podcast
Global Ethics Corner: Who Should Control Egypt's Water?
As Ethiopia continues construction on the Grand Renaissance Dam on the Blue Nile, Egyptian officials are worried about their water supply. Does Ethiopia have the ...
JUN 22, 2013 • News
Chatterjee: The Ethics of Preventive War
Global Ethics Fellow Deen Chatterjee's edited volume The Ethics of Preventive War was featured in International Law Reporter.
JUN 20, 2013 • News
Michael Ignatieff: "La tecnología le da a los gobiernos un "poder sin precedentes" y la prensa tiene que ser "mucho más fuerte" para controlarlo"
The Uruguayan weekly newspaper "Búsqueda," one of the two most influential political weekly newspapers in the country, featured a full-page interview with Centennial chair ...
JUN 18, 2013 • Article
Policy Innovations Digital Magazine (2006-2016): Commentary: WEF Proposes a Public-Private United "Nations"
The United Nations faces further erosion of authority if the World Economic Forum gets its way on global governance.
JUN 17, 2013 • Podcast
The Unwinding: An Inner History of the New America
Since the late 1970s, says George Packer, we've been living in a new era. The structures that supported ordinary Americans' ambitions, from government to business ...
JUN 17, 2013 • Podcast
Global Ethics Corner: Weighing Privacy Against National Security
The recent revelations that the NSA is collecting cell phone and Internet data from millions of Americans has left many asking questions. Is this action ...
JUN 13, 2013 • Podcast
Ethics Matter: Jeremy Scahill on the World as a Battlefield
In the name of the "war on terror," the U.S. is conducting covert warfare and targeted killings, and it dismisses the resulting deaths of ...
JUN 13, 2013 • Article
China's Unilateral Sanctions
China's opposition to economic sanctions is legendary, yet there has been a subtle but significant shift in its own use of such sanctions. This represents ...