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.
Good to Know: Can China reboot its economy? Jeremy Wallace - November 12, 2024 Xi Jinping’s latest stimulus move kicks the can down the road.
Why nationalist parties don’t always like their national soccer teams Erik Voeten - June 25, 2024 Far-right surge in European elections casts a shadow over EURO 2024.
Maybe young men and women aren’t so ideologically different John Sides - January 29, 2024 A viral graph isn't the full story.
Foreign policy-related U.S. presidential campaign ads ▶️ Alexandra Guisinger - January 2, 2024 This Good Playlist offers highlights from television presidential campaign ads since the 1950s.
Paying for the green transition Henry Farrell and Mark Blyth - November 27, 2023 If Trump and the Republicans win, it may be the end of the green transition in the U.S., argues Mark Blyth.
Anti-establishment centrists may well win the Dutch elections Erik Voeten - November 20, 2023 Parties that defy conventional labels are shaking up Dutch politics. Are they unicorns – or a model for other countries?
Democrats and Republicans seem to agree about one foreign policy point: Getting tough on China Rachel Myrick - June 4, 2021 But research suggests that U.S. concerns about a rising China won’t bring Democrats and Republicans closer together
Britain has just admitted that it’s breaking its word on Brexit Henry Farrell - September 7, 2020 A U.K. government minister says the U.K. will “break international law, in a very specific and limited way."
Boris Johnson doesn’t dare sack his chief adviser Henry Farrell - May 25, 2020 One Conservative prime minister called him a ‘career psychopath.’ Now another refuses to let him go.