
Articles
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1 month ago |
lawfaremedia.org | Tyler McBrien |Van Jackson |Michael Brenes |Jen Patja
Published by The Lawfare Institute in Cooperation With On today’s episode, Van Jackson, Professor of International Relations at Victoria University of Wellington, and Michael Brenes, Associate Director of the Brady-Johnson Program in Grand Strategy and Lecturer in History at Yale University, join Lawfare Managing Editor Tyler McBrien to talk about their new book, “The Rivalry Peril: How Great-Power Competition Threatens Peace and Weakens Democracy,” in which they make the case for the United...
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2 months ago |
foreignaffairs.com | Elliott Abrams |Jorge Castañeda |jorge castaneda |Roger Ferguson |Michael Brenes
The return of Donald Trump to the White House has been cast by many observers as the end of an era. The U.S.-led order, variously described as the rules-based order or the liberal international order, which rose to its feet after World War II and strode triumphantly around the world after the end of the Cold War, is no more. Indeed, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio described that order as “obsolete” during his confirmation hearings in January.
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2 months ago |
foreignpolicy.com | Van Jackson |Michael Brenes
United States China North America What does economic inequality have to do with great-power competition? Much more than you might think. Congress and the White House currently direct resources toward the national security state and away from programs and policies that support the public welfare.
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2 months ago |
tasam.org | Michael Brenes
2016’da olduğu gibi, Donald Trump’ın başkanlığı Washington’daki ve dışındaki yorumcuları ABD dış politikasının yönü üzerine düşünmeye sevk etti. Trump’ın Çin ve Rusya’nın yanı sıra Hindistan ve küresel Güney’deki yükselen güçlerle nasıl bir ilişki kuracağına dair birçok soru gündeme geliyor. Trump’ın ilk dönemi, önümüzdeki yıllarda ABD’nin dünya sahnesindeki rolünü nasıl yöneteceğine dair önemli bir referans noktası oluştursa da, ABD dış politikası belirsiz bir döneme giriyor.
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2 months ago |
almendron.com | Michael Brenes |Van Jackson
As it did in 2016, Donald Trump’s presidency has prompted commentators in and outside Washington to reflect on the direction of U.S. foreign policy. Questions abound over how Trump will deal with China and Russia, as well as India and emerging powers in the global South. U.S. foreign policy is headed into a period of uncertainty, even if Trump’s first term provides a stark reference point for how he might manage the United States’ role in the world in the coming years.
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