Fully-matching results
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Foreign Policy Matters: Dwindling GOP Support for Ukraine | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
We’re back with fresh insights on foreign policy, public opinion, and more. https://globalaffairs.org/foreign-policy-matters-dwindling-gop-support-ukraine -
Reuters
Americans More Threatened by Russia Than China | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
American feelings toward Russia and China are lower than during the Cold War, Council polling shows.
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Exclusive Council Update for President's Club Members | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
Council President Ivo Daalder overviews current global issues amid the pandemic and how the Council is impacted in this exclusive event for President's Club members. -
US Foreign Policy
World Review: The Fallout from Afghanistan | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
Bobby Ghosh, Steve Erlanger, and Carla Anne Robbins join Ivo Daalder to discuss the week's top news stories.
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Reuters
Black Americans' Views on the War in Ukraine | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
Black Americans are supportive of aid to Ukraine, but less likely than other Americans to back an open-ended support of Kyiv “for as long as it takes.”
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AP Photos
Most Americans See Value in International Trade | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
While the US public believes trade is good for the economy, it does favors some restrictions—especially on goods such as semiconductors.
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AP Photos
Do Russians Fear the West? | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
The Russian public is concerned about NATO expansion but does not think an attack from the West is imminent.
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Public Opinion
Americans Want a Nuclear-Free World | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
Today, most Americans don’t want a world with nuclear weapons. According to the 2020 Chicago Council Survey two-thirds of Americans (66%) believe that no country should be allowed to have nuclear weapons.
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AP Photos
Americans More Concerned about Threats at Home Than Abroad | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
More Americans consider issues like weakening democracy and political polarization to be critical threats to the United States than foreign adversaries.
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Lynne Sladky/AP
Generational Divides in Attitudes toward the US Role in the World | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
Unlike their elders, young Americans don’t buy into US exceptionalism and are divided on whether the United States should play an active role or stay out of world affairs.