The coming age of zombie internationalism Julia Gray - March 10, 2025 Treaties and institutions remain, but countries act as if they don’t.
Good to Know: How tariffs work Alexandra Guisinger - December 20, 2024 The idea of tariffs as a tax revenue stream seems easy to understand. Their political consequences are less so.
Good To Know: The Eurovision Song Contest Alexandra Guisinger - May 7, 2024 Why Eurovision is a model of the best and worst of international cooperation.
Recent WTO rulings may complicate green industrial policies Todd N. Tucker - December 20, 2022 Will the WTO framework discourage countries from decarbonization plans that prioritize their own workers, supply chains and producers?
China and India weren’t critical of Putin’s war. Did that change? Rohan Mukherjee - September 26, 2022 Neither country was inclined to defend a global order that denies their status aspirations, but the war’s impact may be forcing a rethink
Can the U.S. fight climate change — and shift industrial policy? Jonas Nahm, Joanna Lewis, and Bentley Allan - August 12, 2022 Ramping up a domestic supply chain for clean energy won’t be easy.
Russia’s allies have been pretty quiet on Ukraine Martin Binder and Autumn Lockwood Payton - March 25, 2022 Here’s what might happen next within the ‘BRICS’ bloc
There are two ways to kick Russia out of the world trade system. One is more likely to work. Timothy Meyer and Todd N. Tucker - March 11, 2022 Would WTO members change the rules?
When Xi and Putin declared a united front against the United States Stacie Goddard - February 8, 2022 A February 2022 joint statement reveals strong views about sovereignty and territorial integrity.
The E.U.-U.S. steel deal could transform the fight against climate change Todd N. Tucker and Bentley Allan - October 31, 2021 Suddenly, the COP26 meeting in Scotland isn’t this week’s big climate news