Fully-matching results
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Reuters
The Food Waste and Climate Connection | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
If food waste were a country, it would be the world's third-largest greenhouse gas emitter behind China and the US.
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AP Photos
Biden's Meeting with Xi Set a Very Low Bar for US-China Relations
"If there’s one thing the two sides agree on, it’s that they disagree on some fundamental issues," Paul Poast writes.
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Manson Yim
Hong Kong and the Future of One Country, Two Systems | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
Victoria Tin-bor Hui and Jeffrey Wasserstrom join the Chicago Council on Global Affairs to discuss what protests can tell us about where Hong Kong is heading. -
Robert McNeely
1998 Chicago Council Survey | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
The 1998 Chicago Council Survey results reflect a "guarded engagement" by a largely satisfied superpower.
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Public Opinion
2012 Chicago Council Survey | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
The 2012 Chicago Council Survey tracks public opinion on US foreign policy since the September 11 attacks, and includes an assessment of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
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Vahid Salemi / AP
Six in 10 Americans Support US Participation in a Nuclear Agreement with Iran | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
Majorities of Democrats and Independents support a potential deal similar to the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, but only a minority of Republicans agree.
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AP Photos
2023 Survey of Public Opinion on US Foreign Policy | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
The ongoing war in Ukraine continues to impact American attitudes toward global engagement.
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Oct 22Rafiq Maqbool / AP
East Meets West: Europe, Eurasia, and the Shifting Geopolitical Landscape | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
Alexander Cooley and Rachel Rizzo explore how Ukraine's war is reshaping power dynamics across Europe, Eurasia, and the broader international order. Register Today -
The White House
1994 Chicago Council Survey | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
The 1994 Chicago Council survey indicates that American attitudes at both public and leadership levels reflect a "pragmatic internationalism."
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Reuters
What Biden and Blinken Got Right on China
“If Washington is prepared to acknowledge that it can coexist with China, the strategic rivalry could be managed peacefully,” writes Paul Heer in the National Interest.