Results for:
Joshua Busby

Americans Want to Engage the World

In the News
Foreign Affairs
Coauthors

The beltway and the public are closer than you think.

Supporters of U.S. President Barack Obama in Cleveland, Ohio, October 2012
Reuters
Public Opinion

Public Attitudes on US Intelligence

BLOG
Running Numbers by Coauthors

A 2019 survey confirms that Americans broadly support Intelligence agencies despite their limited transparency and persistent antagonism from President Trump.

People walking in blurred motion through the Financial District of Paris, France US Foreign Policy

Trump and His Advisers are Probably Wrong about What Foreign Policy Americans Want

In the News
The Washington Post
Coauthors

Dina Smeltz and Joshua Busby discuss American public opinion of Trump's foreign policy positions.

Donald J. Trump shakes hands with Kim Jong Un Public Opinion

Congress has NATO's back, despite Trump's unilateralism

In the News
The Washington Post
Coauthors

Surveys show deep bipartisan support for the alliance.

President Trump meets Jens Stoltenberg, secretary general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, in the Oval Office US Foreign Policy

Political Polarization the Critical Threat to US, Foreign Policy Experts Say

In the News
The Hill
Coauthors

Dina Smeltz and Joshua Busby discuss how political polarization poses an extreme threat to the United States.

Atlanta, GA
Maria Oswalt
Public Opinion

The Geopolitics of Climate Change

Podcast
Deep Dish on Global Affairs Podcast

As extreme weather increasingly uproots communities and economies, leading experts Simon Dalby and Joshua Busby join Deep Dish to predict how climate change will affect foreign policy.

Clouds over wind turbines
Thomas Richter
Climate and the Environment

Do women matter to national security? The men who lead US foreign policy don't think so.

In the News
The Washington Post
Joshua Busby

Researchers found that nations with higher rates of violence against women also had higher risks of conflict and instability and that when women were part of peacemaking, that peace was more durable.

Members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia stand during a ceremony at a camp in the Colombian mountains on Feb. 18. Defense and Security

Will Anxiety About Terrorism Affect the 2016 Election? Clinton Has the Advantage for Now.

In the News
Washington Post
Joshua Busby

Joshua Busby discusses the 2016 election, and the affects of terrorism.

Brussels Attack Memorial Global Politics