All Articles
When Europe Stops Remembering: Union, Exit, and European Peace
“World peace cannot be safeguarded without the making of creative efforts proportionate to the dangers which threaten it.”
Pipe Dream: How Environmentalists Stopped Keystone but Ignored an Oil Revolution
President Obama announced his rejection of the Keystone XL pipeline project, which had called for a 1,179-mile shortcut in existing pipelines that stretch from oil fields in Alberta, Canada, to refineries and ports on the Gulf of Mexico
The Challenges of Limited War 2.0
Web Columnist Brian Solender explores the nature of the new American foreign policy in the Middle East
Turkey Election: Trading off Democratic Rights for Stability
Rekha Kennedy, a Columbia junior currently studying abroad in turkey on the country's recent election
What You Need to Know: Ukraine
The upheaval in the Ukraine is rapidly escalating; we've compiled the best thinking on the topic to help you keep up
World Leader’s Forum:
Her Excellency Sheikh Hasina, Prime Minister of the Government of Bangladesh delivers an address titled, "Girls Lead the Way," in Columbia University's Low Library
Understanding the Madmen: The Rationale for Iran's Rhetoric
By recognizing how domestic considerations play a part in Iranian foreign policy, we can better understand why their pronouncements seem to be at odds with their commitments.
Malaysian Malaise - Poor Prospects for Democracy in Anwar Ibrahim’s Legal Woes
To be sure, the headline “Malaysian Court Upholds Opposition Leader’s Sodomy Conviction” is not necessarily shocking in its own right. This is, after all, the era in which political figures being caught up in purportedly lurid sex scandals is now almost cliché.
Radio Silence - A Defense of Carmen Aristegui and a Mexican Free Press
Carmen Aristegui, considered the most famous newscast journalist in Mexico, once hosted a daily morning radio talk show followed devoutly by millions of middle-class Mexicans. Her personal brand of investigatory journalism was markedly different from the standard of Mexican media: aggressive, probing—if sometimes lacking in reportorial rigor.