MAR 19, 2014 • Article
The Ethics of Avoiding Conflict with China
Is there a policy prescription that can avoid turning predictions of a Sino-American clash into a self-fulfilling prophecy?
MAR 19, 2014 • Article
Policy Innovations Digital Magazine (2006-2016): Commentary: Forced Evictions Defeat the Spirit of Big Sporting Events
The evicted residents of Rio demand to be included in the benefits and the legacies of big tournaments like the World Cup and Olympics.
MAR 19, 2014 • News
Is the Age of Intervention Over?
Carnegie Council Centennial Chair Michael Ignatieff explores whether democratic support for intervention is eroding across the West, and what the consequences are for international relations ...
MAR 18, 2014 • Podcast
Ethics Matter: A Conversation with Sebastian Junger
Journalist Sebastian Junger knows about war from the inside: the horror and pain, the excitement and heightened awareness, and the fierce brotherhood between soldiers. In ...
MAR 18, 2014 • Article
Policy Innovations Digital Magazine (2006-2016): Commentary: Building Resilience
Now is the time for New York to take control of its aging infrastructure and set aside a fund for investing in and upgrading pipelines ...
MAR 18, 2014 • News
Colonel Jeff McCausland on the Annexation of Crimea
Carnegie Council Senior Fellow and CBS Military Analyst Colonel Jeff McCausland gives the latest on Vladimir Putin's legal actions concerning the annexation of Crimea.
MAR 17, 2014 • Article
The Lost Promise of Patriotism: Jonathan Hansen on World War I (Part I)
Jonathan Hansen refers to a group of American scholars, public intellectuals, and social reformers—such as W. E. B. Du Bois, Eugene V. Debs, Jane ...
MAR 17, 2014 • Podcast
Blowing the Whistle
Has the perception of whistleblowers changed? With high-profile cases like Edward Snowden and increased protections for those who accuse their employers of misconduct, have we ...