Would Russia use nuclear weapons in Ukraine? Naomi Egel - August 29, 2024 Scholars think more aggressive actions increase the risk of a nuclear response.
The foreign policy issues that U.S. voters seem likely to prioritize Alexandra Guisinger and Anna Rowland - August 27, 2024 Two new surveys show the U.S. public and academics see the world quite differently.
Violent deaths in Pakistan jumped last year. That’s a big worry. Christopher Clary - January 5, 2024 Outside powers may be unable to ignore the worsening turmoil in Pakistan.
What Shinzo Abe’s assassination means for Japanese politics Daniel Smith - July 9, 2022 Abe stepped down as prime minister in 2020, but never stepped away
Japan’s new prime minister is a third-generation politician. That’s more common than you might think. Daniel Smith - October 5, 2021 Why dynasties dominate the leadership in Japan, and around the world.
Nobody can go to the Tokyo Olympics. So why is the government going ahead with them? Phillip Y. Lipscy and Daniel Smith - July 18, 2021 The political stakes are high, as Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga must face voters in a general election this fall
Trump and his advisers are probably wrong about what foreign policy Americans want Joshua Busby, Jordan Tama, and Dina Smeltz - July 3, 2019 But, then, so are most foreign policy elites. Here’s what they’re missing.
About The Monkey Cage John Sides - June 10, 2019 What is The Monkey Cage?“Democracy is the art of running
Did India shoot down a Pakistani F-16 in February? This just became a big deal. Sameer Lalwani and Emily Tallo - April 17, 2019 There are broader implications for India — and the United States
Lessons for Algeria from the 2011 Egyptian uprising Anna Jacobs and Adel Abdel Ghafar - March 13, 2019 Bouteflika promises not to run again, but the Algerian deep state remains.