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  2. A health care worker takes test samples for the Covid-19 from a man at a temporary virus testing station near Namdaemun in Seoul on August 10. Global Health

    South Korea's Success in Containing the Coronavirus Highlights Importance of Digital Resilience

    In the News
    South China Morning Post by Robert Muggah

    One of the emerging lessons of the Covid-19 pandemic is that countries and companies that digitised early are more likely to recover faster than those that did not

  3. Defining the Path to Zero Hunger in an Equitable ...

    March 2023. The bold vision for a 21st Century of zero hunger in a healthier and more equitable world has been severely clouded by the gloomy vistas of conflict, COVID, and ... No borders could contain COVID-19. Similarly, the cumulative global toll of a https://globalaffairs.org/sites/default/files/2023-03/Defining%20the%20Path%20to%20Zero%20Hunger%20in%20an%20Equitable%20World.pdf
  4. report_republicans-democrats-split-on-increasing-defense-budget_

    This year, with many Americans focused first and foremost on problems at home—primarily, the COVID-19 pandemic—defense spending attitudes have returned to the post-2002 norm. ... Male 31 39 24. Less than high school 16 34 22 High school 19 41 29. https://globalaffairs.org/sites/default/files/2020-12/report_republicans-democrats-split-on-increasing-defense-budget_.pdf
  5. Cleaning workers disinfect the streets and public places of the Itaewon Multicultural District in Seoul, South Korea on May 12, 2020.
    Reuters
    Global Health

    Pandemics Are Also an Urban Planning Problem

    In the News
    Bloomberg CityLab by Ian Klaus

    Will COVID-19 change how cities are designed? Michele Acuto of the Connected Cities Lab talks about density, urbanization and pandemic preparation.

  6. President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a campaign rally Sept. 21, 2020, at Dayton International Airport in Ohio. Public Opinion

    Most Americans want more global engagement

    In the News
    Chicago Tribune by Ivo H. Daalder,Dina Smeltz

    Rather than moving to cut ties with the rest of the world during the COVID-19 pandemic, majorities of Americans continue to prefer active U.S. engagement and shared leadership in world affairs.

  7. Exterior view of a university building Global Cities

    Imperiled Higher Education Institutions Key to State's Future

    In the News
    Crain's Detroit by John Austin

    The Midwest's colleges and universities are central to community economic renewal and COVID-19 recovery, a revival put at risk by recent fiscal, demographic and short-sighted public policy headwinds.

  8. Preventing Nuclear Proliferation and Reassuring America’s Allies 21-02-08

    The 2020 Defence Strategic Update, released in July 2020, paints a dire picture of the post-COVID-19 world, in which the Indo-Pacific is at the center of global strategic https://globalaffairs.org/sites/default/files/2021-02/report_preventing-nuclear-proliferation-reassuring-americas-allies_0.pdf
  9. report_from-urban-suburban-rural-divide-to-convergence_200813

    https://www.thechicagocouncil.org/publication/lcc/rejecting-retreat. 6. Finally, it is important to recognize that the data analyzed in this report were collected before the COVID-19 pandemic and nationwide ... Moreover, the changed political atmosphere https://globalaffairs.org/sites/default/files/2020-12/report_from-urban-suburban-rural-divide-to-convergence_2020-08-13.pdf
  10. Photo of Northbound Lake Shore Drive looking North to Chicago Skyline.
    Scott Winterroth
    Global Health

    How Chicago Can Avoid the Looming Global Traffic Crisis

    In the News
    Chicago Tribune by Samuel Kling

    As city leaders move beyond coping with the COVID-19 crisis to imagining the future, how to move—literally—poses a challenge.

  11. President Roosevelt examines a globe presented to him by the U.S. Army. December 25, 1942.
    FDR Presidential Library & Museum
    US Foreign Policy

    'Wartime' Leadership? Donald Trump Is No FDR

    In the News
    The Chicago Tribune by Thomas G. Weiss

    Among the most preposterous of delusions from our delusional president is that he is qualified to lead the country in the "war" against COVID-19. Could we imagine a contrast more ludicrous than that between the recycled reality-TV host and Frankl

  12. Flags outside of the 76th United Nations General Assembly in NY.
    Diplomatic Security Service
    Global Politics

    Biden Says America Is Back at the Table. Is It?

    In the News
    the Chicago Tribune by Elizabeth Shackelford

    Senior Fellow Elizabeth Shackelford explains how it will take more than mere words to create the multilateral responses the world needs to climate change, COVID-19, and the global crises yet to come.

  13. Tourists wearing masks during COVID 19 pandemic in Singapore. Global Cities

    The Post-Pandemic Urban Future Is Already Here

    In the News
    Bloomberg CityLab by Ian Klaus

    The coronavirus crisis stands to dramatically reshape cities around the world. But the biggest revolutions in urban space may have begun before the pandemic.

  14. President Biden delivering remarks about COVID-19 response and vaccination program, blue suit partly blocking view in foreground.
    Carlos Fyfe
    Defense and Security

    Biden Must Remove Barriers to Engagement with North Korea

    In the News
    NK News by Matthew Abbott

    "To change the trajectory of the relationship between North Korea and the US, it is critical that Americans pursue principled engagement," writes Matt Abbott in NK News.

  15. Covid-19 cases in China.
    KOBU Agency
    Global Health

    While US Plays Blame Game in Coronavirus Crisis, China Shows Leadership

    In the News
    Chicago Tribune by Ivo H. Daalder

    Ignoring its responsibility for starting the pandemic, Beijing has trumpeted its response as a model for others to follow.

  16. A notice about COVID-19 safety measures is pictured next to closed doors at a departure hall of Narita international airport
    Reuters
    Global Politics

    Omicron Proves World Fails to Face Global Threats with Global Solutions

    In the News
    Chicago Tribune by Elizabeth Shackelford

    “The biggest cost of the nationalist reaction [to omicron] is its damage to future global cooperation,” writes Elizabeth Shackelford in the Chicago Tribune.