The Divine Nine and Black voter support for Kamala Harris Nadia E. Brown, Christine M. Slaughter, and Michael G. Strawbridge - August 5, 2024 A closer look at the history and contributions of Black Greek Letter Organizations.
75 years on, why is the UN Genocide Convention so hard to enforce? Kelebogile Zvobgo - December 9, 2023 Often states deliberate and debate while people die.
America and Europe are targeting Russia’s oil profits Henry Farrell and Agathe Demarais / Managing Editor - December 21, 2022 The oil price cap makes it harder for Russia to use oil money to buy weapons and pay soldiers.
Russia’s using ‘dark’ tankers to evade Western oil sanctions Jan Stockbruegger - December 7, 2022 Sanctions-busting creates a higher risk of accidents and oil spills, if vessels operate outside global regulations
The U.S. couldn’t build Afghanistan a democracy. That rarely works. Jacqueline L. Hazelton - August 31, 2021 Regimes battling a counterinsurgency often depend on corruption to stay in power
Fights over marine boundaries are creating safe zones for pirates Brandon Prins, Anup Phayal, and Aaron Gold - August 4, 2021 New research reveals how contested waters have become maritime hot spots
Members of Congress are specializing less often. That makes them less effective. Craig Volden and Alan E. Wiseman - September 16, 2020 Here’s how to encourage more expertise.
Everyone thinks that Germans oppose ‘coronabonds.’ Our research shows how they’re wrong. Lucio Baccaro, Erik Neimanns, and Björn Bremer - April 20, 2020 Here’s what our April survey revealed
What conservatives get wrong about cosmopolitans Charles Seguin and Brandon Gorman - July 26, 2019 ‘Citizens of the world’ aren’t so elite after all.
Would ‘safe third country’ agreements stem migration to the U.S.? The E.U.-Turkey deal offers some clues. Kelsey Norman - July 19, 2019 But don’t expect to see a decrease in the number of asylum seekers.