What the U.S. would lose if it left the IMF Stephen C. Nelson - May 19, 2025 Global finance isn’t popular with the MAGA crowd. But the International Monetary Fund also supports U.S.-friendly governments.
U.S. foreign aid was once a powerful bargaining tool Haley J. Swedlund - April 16, 2025 The Trump administration has undermined the U.S. global reputation as a reliable partner.
South Africa-U.S. relations hit new hurdles Carolyn E. Holmes - April 9, 2025 The latest on hits to trade and HIV programs – and a controversial refugee program for white Afrikaners.
How Michael Waltz might guide White House foreign policy Christopher Clary - January 14, 2025 What Waltz’s 2014 memoir tells us about Trump’s next national security advisor.
Trump’s election will likely reverse U.S. climate action Jeremy Wallace - November 7, 2024 Despite potential setbacks in the United States, global climate action may still advance.
Will foreign policy actually matter in the 2024 U.S. election? Elizabeth N. Saunders - September 21, 2023 It may not matter much to voters, but foreign policy is definitely on the ballot.
Biden blasted ‘MAGA Republicans.’ Are they a distinct group? Seth McKee, Scott Huffmon, Gibbs Knotts, and Christopher Cooper - September 7, 2022 Here’s what our research found
20 years after 9/11, the U.S. is again in a great power confrontation James Goldgeier - September 9, 2021 The end of the Cold War scrambled U.S. foreign policy — and then 9/11 scrambled it again. Here’s what remains the same.
China’s leaders say that Biden offers a ‘new window of hope.’ Their experts are more skeptical. Kacie Miura and Jessica Chen Weiss - January 21, 2021 Beijing is likely to seek short-term stability as it anticipates a long-term advantage
Biden promises to embrace multilateralism again. World leaders agree. Alexander Kentikelenis and Erik Voeten - December 15, 2020 Our research suggests the liberal order has staying power