
China’s 19th Communist Party Congress—What Does It Mean for F&A?
Asia Pacific Strategist Michael Every assesses the wash-up for food companies and farmers in Australia and New Zealand.
Asia Pacific Strategist Michael Every assesses the wash-up for food companies and farmers in Australia and New Zealand.
After seventy years of low-profile defense activities, Japan is poised to reinvent its national security posture.
Japan has not only oriented its own self-defense forces toward more practical activities in recent years, but has also cultivated security partnerships with countries including Australia, India, and Vietnam.
Further efforts to reform Japan’s forces will likely come up against Article 9 of Japan’s constitution, under which the country renounces the right to maintain a military and settle disputes by force.
Will the perceived threats be enough for President Shinzo Abe to gain popular support for reforming Article 9?
Center for Global Development
Podcast with Charles Kenny
Some in the media would have you believe that large amounts of public money are being pocketed by corrupt officials, and that the only way to stop it is to cut foreign aid budgets. Meanwhile, aid agencies and others argue that foreign aid is necessary to save lives. How do we square these?
By Jeff D. Colgan and Robert O. Keohane
FOREIGN AFFAIRS
To derig the liberal order and stave off complete defeat at the hands of populists, however, traditional parties must do more than rebrand themselves and their ideas. They must develop substantive policies that will make globalization serve the interests of middle- and working-class citizens. Absent such changes, the global liberal order will wither away.
On the occasion of the presentation of Issue 13 of the Awraq journal dedicated to Iraq, Casa Árabe organized a conference, the objective of which was to analyze the foreign policy of Russia and the United States in the Middle East.
The event included contributions by Maxim Suchkov, editor of the Russia-Middle East section at Al-Monitor and an expert on Russia’s International Affairs Council, and by Barah Mikaïl, director of the consulting firm Stractegia and a professor of International Security at Saint Louis University in Madrid.