Search Results
1251 – 1260 of 5,722 search results for 2021 Chicago Council Survey
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Inclusion and EquityJulian WanUS Protests, the G7's Future, US-China
Karen DeYoung of The Washington Post, Matt Kaminski of POLITICO, and Philip Stephens of the Financial Times joined Council President Ivo Daalder to share their perspectives on global news.
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Global PoliticsAndy Wong / APWhy Beating China Might Be the US' Wrong Focus
Is every move against China strengthening the US—or is it just making us weaker? Jessica Chen Weiss breaks it down.
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Lyric Thompson
Found & Chief Executive Officer, Feminist Foreign Policy Collaborative
Expertise
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Brookings InstitutionThe Jungle Grows Back: A Case for American Leadership
Robert Kagan discusses the rise of political partisanship both at home and abroad and considered what the world could look like if the US withdraws from its leadership role. -
Policy BriefCatholic Relief Services/Will BaxterThe Case for Inclusive Agricultural Development
June 17, 2022, RESEARCH Policy Brief by Benjamin Allen , Jacqueline Ashby , John Coonrod , and Wawira Njiru, Catholic Relief Services/Will Baxter, Download Report (PDF), Amid shifts towards inclusive agricultural development, the Center for Global Food and Agriculture offers policy recommendation...
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US Foreign PolicyREUTERSIran May be Biden’s First Foreign Policy Challenge
The United States' strategy towards Iran must include more than just returning to the Iran nuclear agreement, our Deep Dish guests argue.
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Defense and SecurityReutersAnnexation and Beyond, Israel's Evolving Foreign Policy
Jonathan Schachter and Tamara Cofman Wittes examine how Israel's foreign policy has changed and how its relationships will shape the future.
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Staff Sgt. Timothy KosterThe New US-Syria Policy
Former US Ambassador to Syria Robert Ford and Tamara Cofman Wittes, former deputy assistant secretary of state for near east affairs, join the Deep Dish podcast to dissect the implications of the withdrawal from Syria for US-Syria policy.
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Alisdare HicksonThe Midwest Can't Afford to Close Its Doors to Refugees
Midwestern governors have stopped accepting Syrian refugees in the wake of the Paris and Beirut terrorist attacks, though data shows they pose little risk.