APR 14, 2011 • Podcast
The Good Book: A Humanist Bible
Philosopher A.C. Grayling has created a non-religious Bible that draws from the wealth of secular literature and philosophy in both Western and Eastern traditions. ...
APR 13, 2011 • Article
The Carnegie New Leaders Discussions at the Fort Hamilton Army Base, Army School of Leadership
On a field trip to Fort Hamilton Army Base, members of Carnegie New Leaders sat down with military officers to discuss the qualities and skills ...
APR 12, 2011 • Podcast
How to Run the World: Charting a Course to the Next Renaissance
We're living in a multi-polar, multi-civilizational world, says Parag Khanna, and the old rules no longer apply. Increasingly, states, international organizations, NGOs, and corporations must ...
APR 8, 2011 • Podcast
Edward Glaeser on the Triumph of the City
"We live in an age in which it is effortless to telecommunicate across the globe, in which we could all just dial in from some ...
APR 8, 2011 • Podcast
The World Ahead: Conflict or Cooperation?
After the Cold War, Fukuyama, Huntington, and Mearsheimer each presented a bold vision of what the driving forces of world politics would be. Yet all ...
APR 8, 2011 • Podcast
Global Ethics Corner: Lustration: Purging Civil Servants in New Democracies
In transitions from authoritarian rule to democracy, systems must decide who to exclude from public office. What do you do with those who, without being ...
APR 6, 2011 • Podcast
The Arab Uprisings: The View from Cairo
As president of the American University of Cairo, Lisa Anderson was a witness to the recent protests in Tahrir Square. In this fascinating talk, she ...
APR 5, 2011 • Podcast
One Nation Under Surveillance: A New Social Contract to Defend Freedom Without Sacrificing Liberty
The boundaries between public and private are crumbling fast, often with the active or passive consent of those whose privacy is breached. What limits, if ...