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  2. How Do Attitudes about the Coronavirus Response Differ in Russia and the United States? | Chicago Council on Global Affairs Public Opinion

    How Do Attitudes about the Coronavirus Response Differ in Russia and the United States? | Chicago Council on Global Affairs

    Blog Post
    by Stepan Goncharov,Dina Smeltz

    Survey data shows that Russians are more likely than Americans to say that their nation's government handled the coronavirus pandemic effectively.

  3. Talking the Talk – How Cities Shape Migration Narratives on the Global Agenda | Chicago Council on Global Affairs Global Cities

    Talking the Talk – How Cities Shape Migration Narratives on the Global Agenda | Chicago Council on Global Affairs

    Blog Post
    by Janina Stürner-Siovitz

    Cities use migration-focused narratives not only in an attempt to influence global discussions, but also to achieve concrete outcomes for transforming local realities.

  4. When Intermediary Links in the Supply Chain are Weakened, the Whole Food System Suffers | Chicago Council on Global Affairs Food and Agriculture

    When Intermediary Links in the Supply Chain are Weakened, the Whole Food System Suffers | Chicago Council on Global Affairs

    Blog Post
    by Nupur Parikh

    Businesses in the center of the value chain are crucial to the food system, and these intermediary links are under threat from the COVID-19 pandemic.

  5. Are Urbanites Willing to Ditch Cars for More Sustainable Commutes? | Chicago Council on Global Affairs Global Cities

    Are Urbanites Willing to Ditch Cars for More Sustainable Commutes? | Chicago Council on Global Affairs

    Research
    Working Paper by Samuel Kling,Alexander Hitch

    A recent poll from the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and The Harris Poll shows urban and suburban residents cities are looking to sustainable mobility to forestall a potential long-term shift to solo driving.

  6. A railyard in Galesburg, Ill., shows various trains lined up awaiting track space, with a yellow-fronted BNSF engine in the front.
    Shafkat Anowar/AP
    Global Economy

    Five Features That Define Chicago's Role in Global Trade | Chicago Council on Global Affairs

    Blog Post
    ChicagoGlobal by AJ Caughey

    Illinois and its largest city play crucial parts in the worldwide trade landscape. To understand what those parts entail, we spoke to World Business Chicago.

  7. How LGBTQIA+ Farmers are Reimagining Agriculture | Chicago Council on Global Affairs Food and Agriculture

    How LGBTQIA+ Farmers are Reimagining Agriculture | Chicago Council on Global Affairs

    Blog Post
    by Natalie Burdsall

    Queer farmers are challenging discriminatory legacies in agriculture, and envisioning an agricultural system that uplifts and celebrates LBGTQIA+ people.

  8. After a Year of Pandemic, Global Public Opinion Shows Increasing Desire for Vaccine | Chicago Council on Global Affairs Global Health

    After a Year of Pandemic, Global Public Opinion Shows Increasing Desire for Vaccine | Chicago Council on Global Affairs

    Blog Post
    by Craig Kafura,Karl Friedhoff,Brendan Helm,Luke Witzig,Peter Wang

    It has now been a year since many nations began to implement restrictions due to the pandemic. As the global health crisis drags into its second year, more people seek the vaccine as a way to return to normal.

  9. An advertisement on a wall saying "together we can help stop the spread of COVID-19" Global Health

    On COVID-19, Foreign Policy Elites are Just as Polarized as the Public

    In the News
    The Hill by Dina Smeltz,Jonathan Monten,Joshua Busby

    New survey results suggest that President-elect Biden will have to work hard to cultivate bipartisan buy-in for efforts to rein in the spread of the coronavirus pandemic.

  10. A nurse prepares COVID-19 vaccine for a patient in India
    REUTERS
    Global Health

    India's COVID-19 Crisis Pushes the US to Get Vaccine Diplomacy Right

    In the News
    Chicago Tribune by Elizabeth Shackelford

    “Viruses don't respect borders and neither do their knock-on effects,” Elizabeth Shackelford writes in the Chicago Tribune. “An uncontrolled outbreak in a country of 1.4 billion people is a crisis for all.”

  11. 21 Years after 9/11, Americans Are Less Concerned about Terrorism | Chicago Council on Global Affairs Public Opinion

    21 Years after 9/11, Americans Are Less Concerned about Terrorism | Chicago Council on Global Affairs

    Research
    Public Opinion Survey by Dina Smeltz,Emily Sullivan

    In 2002, nine in 10 Americans saw international terrorism as a critical threat. About six in 10 do today, Council polling shows.