Robert Weiner
Annual Editions: Global Issues, 32/E
Robert Weiner
Annual Editions: Global Issues, 32/E
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The Annual Editions series is designed to provide convenient, inexpensive access to a wide range of current articles from some of the most respected magazines, newspapers, and journals published today. Annual Editions are updated on a regular basis through a continuous monitoring of over 300 periodical sources. The articles selected are authored by prominent scholars, researchers, and commentators writing for a general audience. Each Annual Editions volume has a number of features designed to make them especially valuable for classroom use: an annotated Table of Contents, a Topic Guide, an…mehr
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The Annual Editions series is designed to provide convenient, inexpensive access to a wide range of current articles from some of the most respected magazines, newspapers, and journals published today. Annual Editions are updated on a regular basis through a continuous monitoring of over 300 periodical sources. The articles selected are authored by prominent scholars, researchers, and commentators writing for a general audience. Each Annual Editions volume has a number of features designed to make them especially valuable for classroom use: an annotated Table of Contents, a Topic Guide, an annotated listing of supporting websites, Learning Outcomes and a brief overview for each unit, and Critical Thinking questions at the end of each article. Go to the McGraw-Hill Create(TM) Annual Editions Article Collection at www.mcgrawhillcreate.com/annualeditions to browse the entire collection. Select individual Annual Editions articles to enhance your course, or access and select the entire Weiner: Annual Editions: Global Issues, 32/e ExpressBook for an easy, pre-built teaching resource. Using Annual Editions in the Classroom is also an excellent instructor resource. Visit the Create Central Online Learning Center at www.mhhe.com/createcentral for more details.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: McGraw Hill LLC
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Altersempfehlung: 18 bis 22 Jahre
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Februar 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 272mm x 213mm x 8mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9781259676000
- ISBN-10: 1259676005
- Artikelnr.: 43153003
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: McGraw Hill LLC
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Altersempfehlung: 18 bis 22 Jahre
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Februar 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 272mm x 213mm x 8mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9781259676000
- ISBN-10: 1259676005
- Artikelnr.: 43153003
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
UNIT: Global Issues in the Twenty-First Century: An Overview
Our Global Situation and Prospects for the Future, Jerome C. Glenn, The
Futurist, 2014
The Millennium State of the Future Report for 2014 emphasizes that humanity
continues to improve in general. People are becoming healthier, wealthier,
better educated, and more peaceful. However, the international community
needs to reduce income inequality in order to avoid long-term instability.
The author concludes with a series of recommendations for improving the
human condition based on a global collective intelligence system.
The Geopolitics of Cyberspace after Snowden, Ron Deibert, Current History,
2015
The author discusses the environment in which the Internet functions and
the "digital exhaust" emitted by mobile devices which provide vast
quantities of metadata about each individual. The effect of Snowden's
revelations has raised the question of a free Internet as opposed to
control and censorship by state governments as they seek to restore
"technological sovereignty."
The Return of Geopolitics: The Revenge of the Revisionist Powers, Walter
Russell Mead, Foreign Affairs, 2014
The post-cold war settlement is being challenged by three revisionist
powers-Russia, China, and Iran. President Obama's vision of a world order
based on liberal democracy has been undermined by the return of
geopolitics. Russia, China, and Iran share in common the desire to curb
U.S. power.
The Once and Future Hegemon, Salvatore Babones, The National Interest, 2015
The author argues that the United States is not a declining hegemon,
because history shows that hegemony runs in cycles of hundreds of years
rather than decades. The rise of Chinese power as a strategic threat to the
United States has been overemphasized. The United States will continue as a
hegemon in alliance with other English-speaking states.
The Unraveling: How to Respond to a Disordered World, Richard N. Haass,
Foreign Affairs, 2014
The article focuses on the trend toward disorder in the international
system, as the post-cold war international order has broken down. The
disorder is the result of a combination of structural changes in the
international system and poor policy choices by U.S. leaders. The growing
disorder has been marked by a diffusion of power and the inability of the
United States to resolve various crises in the Middle East and on the
periphery of Asia.
A Kinder, Gentler Immigration Policy: Forget Comprehensive Reform--Let the
States Compete, Jagdish Bhagwati and Francisco Rivera-Batiz, Foreign
Affairs, 2013
Immigration reform will not eliminate illegal immigration and strict border
controls will not stop the flow. Consequently, states should take steps to
ease the lives of illegal immigrants.
The Information Revolution and Power, Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Current History,
2014
The author writes that there are two major power shifts in the 21st
century. A "horizontal transition" from East to West and "a vertical
diffusion of power from states to NGOs" which is being brought about by the
information revolution.
UNIT: Population, Natural Resources, and Climate Change
The New Population Bomb: The Four Megatrends That Will Change the World,
Jack A. Goldstone, Foreign Affairs, 2010
Over the next forty years, the relative demographic weight of the world's
developed countries will significantly drop as their workforce ages and
numerically declines. Most of the world's population growth will be
concentrated in the poorest countries. At the same time most of the world's
population will become urbanized. These four trends have significant
political and economic consequences.
Climate Change Politics on the Road to Paris, Lorraine Elliott, Current
History, 2015
A major meeting on climate change is scheduled to take place in Paris in
2015 to replace the Kyoto Protocol of 1997. Major differences still exist
between the developed and developing countries. The developed countries
have the responsibility to take the lead due to their historic contribution
to climate change and their financial and technical resources.
Welcome to the Revolution: Why Shale Is the Next Shale, Edward L. Morse,
Foreign Affairs, 2014
The author predicts that the use of shale oil by the United States will
make it the world's largest oil producer with profound geopolitical
implications.
Think Again: Climate Treaties, David Shorr, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Idealized multilateralism via climate treaty does not work because
countries should not be allowed to override environmental imperatives.
UNIT: The Global Political Economy
Think Again: European Decline, Mark Leonard and Hans Kundnani, Foreign
Policy, 2013
It may appear that Europe is down and out, but on closer examination
prospects for the economic future are far better than they look. The
reasons for this optimistic assessment are provided.
Broken BRICs, Ruchir Sharma, Foreign Affairs, 2012
One of the most talked-about trends in the global economy has been the
rapid economic growth of Brazil, Russia, India, and China-the so-called
BRIC countries. After the financial crisis of 2008, the pace of growth in
these countries has slowed. Forecasts that they would overtake the
developed countries' economies were premature. The author describes the
significant differences among these four countries as well as problems with
long-range economic forecasts.
The Roadblock: If the West Doesn't Shape Up, the Rest of the World Will
Just Go around It. Mohamed A. El-Erian, Foreign Policy, 2013
Developing countries are wired into a volatile international and economic
financial controlled by the West.
New World Order: Labor, Capital, and Ideas in the Power Law Economy, Erik
Brynjolfsson, Andrew McAfee, and Michael Spence, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Emphasis is on the importance of digital technology as creating innovation
and entrepreneurship in the era of globalization.
As Objects Go Online: The Promise (and Pitfalls) of the Internet of Things
, Neil Gershenfeld and J. P. Vasseur, Foreign Affairs, 2014
There will be profound implications for linking the digital and physical
worlds, where the Internet will transmit actual things.
Britain and Europe: The End of the Affair? Matthias Matthijs, Current
History, 2014
Britain is the closest to leaving the European Union than it has ever been
since joining it in 1973.
Is Africa's Land Up for Grabs? Roy Laishley, Africa Renewal Online, 2014
Large scale land acquisitions by foreign governments and multinationals in
Africa represent a new form of neocolonialism. Land grabs can have negative
effects on the ability of African governments to increase food production.
Land acquisitions need to be subject to "win-win" agreements between the
host government and foreign investors.
The Blood Cries Out, Jillian Keenan, Foreign Policy, 2015
The situation in Burundi bears careful watching as the central African
land-locked country may be on the verge of a civil war. There is
insufficient land for its burgeoning population which relies heavily on
farming for its subsistence. Burundi is one of the most densely populated
and poor countries in the world.
Can a Post-Crisis Country Survive in the Time of Ebola? Jordan Ryan,
Harvard International Review, 2015
The author discusses his personal experiences in Liberia during the Ebola
epidemic. Liberia already was a fragile, post-conflict society emerging
from a violent civil war. The author concludes with the lessons learned on
how to promote development in a post-conflict society that has experienced
an epidemic.
Can Africa Turn from Recovery to Development? Thandika Mkandawire, Current
History, 2014
The Washington consensus was inappropriate for Africa, but in the
post-Washington era, African states need to move from recovery to
accelerated development.
The Early Days of the Group of 77, Karl P. Sauvant, UN Chronicle, 2014
The author writes that the G-77 became an integral part of UNCTAD and was
one of the most important agents for the specialization of the developing
countries on matters relating to the international political economy.
The Mobile-Finance Revolution: How Cell Phones Can Spur Development, Jake
Kendall and Roger Voorhies, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Mobile cell phones have spread to 90% of the world's poor and can help to
eliminate poverty via the extension of micro-credit and banking services
and the promotion of entrepreneurial activity.
UNIT: Terrorism
ISIS Is Not a Terrorist Group: Why Counterterrorism Won't Stop the Latest
Jihadist Threat, Audrey Kurth Cronin, Foreign Affairs, 2015
ISIS is not a terrorist organization but rather a pseudo-state which
controls territory to establish a caliphate in the Middle East. The US
should pursue a policy of containment toward ISIS.
ISIS and the Third Wave of Jihadism, Fawaz A. Gerges, Current History, 2014
ISIS emerged as an offshoot of the branch of Al Qaeda in Iraq. It emerged
as a result of the grievances of the Sunnis' repression by the Shia regime
of former Prime Minister Maliki as well the failure of state institutions
in Iraq. ISIS continues to focus on se ctarian war as its priority in
waging war with extreme brutality and violence.
Fixing Fragile States, Dennis Blair, Ronald Neumann, and Eric Olson, The
National Interest, 2014
Since the 9/11 attacks, the United States has waged major postwar
reconstruction campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan and smaller programs in
other countries that harbor Al Qaeda affiliates. Much of the threat stems
from fragile states with weak institutions, higher rates of poverty, and
deep ethnic, religious, or tribal divisions.
UNIT: Conflict and Peace
The Growing Threat of Maritime Conflict, Michael T. Klare, Current History
, 2013
Prospects for conflict over disputed borders have declined, but conflict
over maritime boundaries is growing. A major reason for these conflicts is
energy consumers are increasingly reliant on offshore oil and gas deposits.
Time to Negotiate in Afghanistan, James Dobbins and Carter Malkasian,
Foreign Affairs, 2015
The article details the history of missed opportunities for peace
negotiations in Afghanistan, arguing that a tiny window of opportunity has
opened. A moderate faction favorable to negotiations was led by the late
leader of the Taliban, Mullah Omar. The authors conclude with five
recommendations the United States should take to move negotiations forward.
Water Wars: A Surprisingly Rare Source of Conflict, Gregory Dunn, Harvard
International Review, 2013
Competition for access to the increasingly scarce resource of freshwater
has surprisingly been mostly resolved through peaceful means via negotiated
treaties.
Taiwan's Dire Straits, John J. Mearsheimer, The National Interest, 2014
The rise of China in the international system will upset the balance of
power in Beijing's favor, with profound implications for Taiwan. China will
attempt to dominate Asia as a regional hegemon.
Why 1914 Still Matters, Norman Friedman, The US Naval Institute Proceedings
, 2014
There is a similarity in the outbreak of war between the United Kingdom and
Germany in 1914 and the possibility of war between the United States and
China given that both cases involved a naval arms race that challenged the
trading hegemon.
Russia's Latest Land Grab: How Putin Won Crimea and Lost Ukraine, Jeffrey
Mankoff, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Russian annexation of Crimea follows a pattern used in Georgia, Moldova,
and Azerbaijan that is designed to promote its strategic interests.
The Utility of Cyberpower, Kevin L. Parker, Military Review, 2014
The focus is on the relationship between cyberpower and cyberspace as the
military seeks to defend the national security of the United States against
cyberattacks.
U.N. Treaty Is First Aimed at Regulating Global Arms Sales, Neil
MacFarquhar, The New York Times, 2013
The General Assembly approved a treaty aimed at regulating the global trade
in conventional weapons. The opinions of both proponents and opponents of
the treaty are described.
Turkey at a Tipping Point, Jenny White, Current History, 2014
Turkey is no longer the pliant U.S. ally that it was during the Cold War.
Then it was controlled by the military. President Erdogan has established
civilian control over the military. Turkey is now a prosperous post-Ottoman
state with a global presence and reactive foreign policy.
Kurdish Nationalism's Moment of Truth? Michael Eppel, Current History, 2014
The Kurdish national movement represents 25-30 million Kurds scattered in
Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria. The rise of ISIS and the civil conflict in
Syria has provided the Kurds with one of the most favorable opportunities
to consolidate the existence of autonomous regions and possibly the
creation of an independent Kurdistan. However, the United States, Turkey,
and the Arab states are opposed to the creation of an independent
Kurdistan.
The New Russian Chill in the Baltic, Mark Kramer, Current History, 2015
Russia's annexation of the Crimea and intervention in Eastern Ukraine has
raised concerns about NATO's commitment under article 5 of its Charter to
defend the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia.2014 has seen an
increase in the quantity and intensity of Russian military provocations
against the Baltic States, which has also raised concerns in Poland.
Finland and Sweden in reaction, are also considering joining NATO.
The Cuban Missile Crisis at 50: Lessons for U.S. Foreign Policy Today,
Graham Allison, Foreign Affairs, 2012
Lessons learned from the Cuban missile crisis can be applied to the problem
of the proliferation of nuclear weapons. The best way to prevent Iran from
developing the bomb is to lengthen the time for the development of the
bomb, focus on transparency measures to prevent cheating, and threaten
regime change if an agreement is violated. The Israeli factor makes the
Iranian nuclear situation more complex.
UNIT: Ethics and Values
Xi's Corruption Crackdown: How Bribery and Graft Threaten the Chinese Dream
, James Leung, Foreign Affairs, 2015
Chinese President Xi Jinping has cast corruption as an existential threat.
Corruption can lead to the collapse of the Chinese Communist party and the
downfall of the state. Corruption is a deeply rooted cultural phenomenon.
The G-Word: The Armenian Massacre and the Politics of Genocide, Thomas de
Waal, Foreign Affairs, 2015
2015 marks 100 years since the Armenian community in Ottoman Turkey faced
efforts on the part of the Turkish government to destroy it. Over one
million Armenians perished in the genocide. For strategic reasons, because
Turkey is a major U.S. ally, Washington refuses to use the G-word to
describe the great catastrophe which befell the Armenians.
Race in the Modern World: The Problem of the Color Line, Kwame Anthony
Appiah, Foreign Affairs, 2015
The author discusses various efforts that have been made over the years to
define race, with a great deal of emphasis placed on the work of W. E. B.
Du Bois. Du Bois discussed race as a transnational phenomenon as
illustrated by demonstrations in Nigeria protesting the shooting by a
police officer of an unarmed black teenager, Michael Brown, in Ferguson,
Missouri.
The Surveillance State and Its Discontents, Anonymous, Foreign Policy, 2013
There is a struggle between those who wish to use information "to harness
the web in the name of national security, those working to bring it under
the letter of the law, and those hoping to liberate it in the name of human
freedom."
Our Global Situation and Prospects for the Future, Jerome C. Glenn, The
Futurist, 2014
The Millennium State of the Future Report for 2014 emphasizes that humanity
continues to improve in general. People are becoming healthier, wealthier,
better educated, and more peaceful. However, the international community
needs to reduce income inequality in order to avoid long-term instability.
The author concludes with a series of recommendations for improving the
human condition based on a global collective intelligence system.
The Geopolitics of Cyberspace after Snowden, Ron Deibert, Current History,
2015
The author discusses the environment in which the Internet functions and
the "digital exhaust" emitted by mobile devices which provide vast
quantities of metadata about each individual. The effect of Snowden's
revelations has raised the question of a free Internet as opposed to
control and censorship by state governments as they seek to restore
"technological sovereignty."
The Return of Geopolitics: The Revenge of the Revisionist Powers, Walter
Russell Mead, Foreign Affairs, 2014
The post-cold war settlement is being challenged by three revisionist
powers-Russia, China, and Iran. President Obama's vision of a world order
based on liberal democracy has been undermined by the return of
geopolitics. Russia, China, and Iran share in common the desire to curb
U.S. power.
The Once and Future Hegemon, Salvatore Babones, The National Interest, 2015
The author argues that the United States is not a declining hegemon,
because history shows that hegemony runs in cycles of hundreds of years
rather than decades. The rise of Chinese power as a strategic threat to the
United States has been overemphasized. The United States will continue as a
hegemon in alliance with other English-speaking states.
The Unraveling: How to Respond to a Disordered World, Richard N. Haass,
Foreign Affairs, 2014
The article focuses on the trend toward disorder in the international
system, as the post-cold war international order has broken down. The
disorder is the result of a combination of structural changes in the
international system and poor policy choices by U.S. leaders. The growing
disorder has been marked by a diffusion of power and the inability of the
United States to resolve various crises in the Middle East and on the
periphery of Asia.
A Kinder, Gentler Immigration Policy: Forget Comprehensive Reform--Let the
States Compete, Jagdish Bhagwati and Francisco Rivera-Batiz, Foreign
Affairs, 2013
Immigration reform will not eliminate illegal immigration and strict border
controls will not stop the flow. Consequently, states should take steps to
ease the lives of illegal immigrants.
The Information Revolution and Power, Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Current History,
2014
The author writes that there are two major power shifts in the 21st
century. A "horizontal transition" from East to West and "a vertical
diffusion of power from states to NGOs" which is being brought about by the
information revolution.
UNIT: Population, Natural Resources, and Climate Change
The New Population Bomb: The Four Megatrends That Will Change the World,
Jack A. Goldstone, Foreign Affairs, 2010
Over the next forty years, the relative demographic weight of the world's
developed countries will significantly drop as their workforce ages and
numerically declines. Most of the world's population growth will be
concentrated in the poorest countries. At the same time most of the world's
population will become urbanized. These four trends have significant
political and economic consequences.
Climate Change Politics on the Road to Paris, Lorraine Elliott, Current
History, 2015
A major meeting on climate change is scheduled to take place in Paris in
2015 to replace the Kyoto Protocol of 1997. Major differences still exist
between the developed and developing countries. The developed countries
have the responsibility to take the lead due to their historic contribution
to climate change and their financial and technical resources.
Welcome to the Revolution: Why Shale Is the Next Shale, Edward L. Morse,
Foreign Affairs, 2014
The author predicts that the use of shale oil by the United States will
make it the world's largest oil producer with profound geopolitical
implications.
Think Again: Climate Treaties, David Shorr, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Idealized multilateralism via climate treaty does not work because
countries should not be allowed to override environmental imperatives.
UNIT: The Global Political Economy
Think Again: European Decline, Mark Leonard and Hans Kundnani, Foreign
Policy, 2013
It may appear that Europe is down and out, but on closer examination
prospects for the economic future are far better than they look. The
reasons for this optimistic assessment are provided.
Broken BRICs, Ruchir Sharma, Foreign Affairs, 2012
One of the most talked-about trends in the global economy has been the
rapid economic growth of Brazil, Russia, India, and China-the so-called
BRIC countries. After the financial crisis of 2008, the pace of growth in
these countries has slowed. Forecasts that they would overtake the
developed countries' economies were premature. The author describes the
significant differences among these four countries as well as problems with
long-range economic forecasts.
The Roadblock: If the West Doesn't Shape Up, the Rest of the World Will
Just Go around It. Mohamed A. El-Erian, Foreign Policy, 2013
Developing countries are wired into a volatile international and economic
financial controlled by the West.
New World Order: Labor, Capital, and Ideas in the Power Law Economy, Erik
Brynjolfsson, Andrew McAfee, and Michael Spence, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Emphasis is on the importance of digital technology as creating innovation
and entrepreneurship in the era of globalization.
As Objects Go Online: The Promise (and Pitfalls) of the Internet of Things
, Neil Gershenfeld and J. P. Vasseur, Foreign Affairs, 2014
There will be profound implications for linking the digital and physical
worlds, where the Internet will transmit actual things.
Britain and Europe: The End of the Affair? Matthias Matthijs, Current
History, 2014
Britain is the closest to leaving the European Union than it has ever been
since joining it in 1973.
Is Africa's Land Up for Grabs? Roy Laishley, Africa Renewal Online, 2014
Large scale land acquisitions by foreign governments and multinationals in
Africa represent a new form of neocolonialism. Land grabs can have negative
effects on the ability of African governments to increase food production.
Land acquisitions need to be subject to "win-win" agreements between the
host government and foreign investors.
The Blood Cries Out, Jillian Keenan, Foreign Policy, 2015
The situation in Burundi bears careful watching as the central African
land-locked country may be on the verge of a civil war. There is
insufficient land for its burgeoning population which relies heavily on
farming for its subsistence. Burundi is one of the most densely populated
and poor countries in the world.
Can a Post-Crisis Country Survive in the Time of Ebola? Jordan Ryan,
Harvard International Review, 2015
The author discusses his personal experiences in Liberia during the Ebola
epidemic. Liberia already was a fragile, post-conflict society emerging
from a violent civil war. The author concludes with the lessons learned on
how to promote development in a post-conflict society that has experienced
an epidemic.
Can Africa Turn from Recovery to Development? Thandika Mkandawire, Current
History, 2014
The Washington consensus was inappropriate for Africa, but in the
post-Washington era, African states need to move from recovery to
accelerated development.
The Early Days of the Group of 77, Karl P. Sauvant, UN Chronicle, 2014
The author writes that the G-77 became an integral part of UNCTAD and was
one of the most important agents for the specialization of the developing
countries on matters relating to the international political economy.
The Mobile-Finance Revolution: How Cell Phones Can Spur Development, Jake
Kendall and Roger Voorhies, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Mobile cell phones have spread to 90% of the world's poor and can help to
eliminate poverty via the extension of micro-credit and banking services
and the promotion of entrepreneurial activity.
UNIT: Terrorism
ISIS Is Not a Terrorist Group: Why Counterterrorism Won't Stop the Latest
Jihadist Threat, Audrey Kurth Cronin, Foreign Affairs, 2015
ISIS is not a terrorist organization but rather a pseudo-state which
controls territory to establish a caliphate in the Middle East. The US
should pursue a policy of containment toward ISIS.
ISIS and the Third Wave of Jihadism, Fawaz A. Gerges, Current History, 2014
ISIS emerged as an offshoot of the branch of Al Qaeda in Iraq. It emerged
as a result of the grievances of the Sunnis' repression by the Shia regime
of former Prime Minister Maliki as well the failure of state institutions
in Iraq. ISIS continues to focus on se ctarian war as its priority in
waging war with extreme brutality and violence.
Fixing Fragile States, Dennis Blair, Ronald Neumann, and Eric Olson, The
National Interest, 2014
Since the 9/11 attacks, the United States has waged major postwar
reconstruction campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan and smaller programs in
other countries that harbor Al Qaeda affiliates. Much of the threat stems
from fragile states with weak institutions, higher rates of poverty, and
deep ethnic, religious, or tribal divisions.
UNIT: Conflict and Peace
The Growing Threat of Maritime Conflict, Michael T. Klare, Current History
, 2013
Prospects for conflict over disputed borders have declined, but conflict
over maritime boundaries is growing. A major reason for these conflicts is
energy consumers are increasingly reliant on offshore oil and gas deposits.
Time to Negotiate in Afghanistan, James Dobbins and Carter Malkasian,
Foreign Affairs, 2015
The article details the history of missed opportunities for peace
negotiations in Afghanistan, arguing that a tiny window of opportunity has
opened. A moderate faction favorable to negotiations was led by the late
leader of the Taliban, Mullah Omar. The authors conclude with five
recommendations the United States should take to move negotiations forward.
Water Wars: A Surprisingly Rare Source of Conflict, Gregory Dunn, Harvard
International Review, 2013
Competition for access to the increasingly scarce resource of freshwater
has surprisingly been mostly resolved through peaceful means via negotiated
treaties.
Taiwan's Dire Straits, John J. Mearsheimer, The National Interest, 2014
The rise of China in the international system will upset the balance of
power in Beijing's favor, with profound implications for Taiwan. China will
attempt to dominate Asia as a regional hegemon.
Why 1914 Still Matters, Norman Friedman, The US Naval Institute Proceedings
, 2014
There is a similarity in the outbreak of war between the United Kingdom and
Germany in 1914 and the possibility of war between the United States and
China given that both cases involved a naval arms race that challenged the
trading hegemon.
Russia's Latest Land Grab: How Putin Won Crimea and Lost Ukraine, Jeffrey
Mankoff, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Russian annexation of Crimea follows a pattern used in Georgia, Moldova,
and Azerbaijan that is designed to promote its strategic interests.
The Utility of Cyberpower, Kevin L. Parker, Military Review, 2014
The focus is on the relationship between cyberpower and cyberspace as the
military seeks to defend the national security of the United States against
cyberattacks.
U.N. Treaty Is First Aimed at Regulating Global Arms Sales, Neil
MacFarquhar, The New York Times, 2013
The General Assembly approved a treaty aimed at regulating the global trade
in conventional weapons. The opinions of both proponents and opponents of
the treaty are described.
Turkey at a Tipping Point, Jenny White, Current History, 2014
Turkey is no longer the pliant U.S. ally that it was during the Cold War.
Then it was controlled by the military. President Erdogan has established
civilian control over the military. Turkey is now a prosperous post-Ottoman
state with a global presence and reactive foreign policy.
Kurdish Nationalism's Moment of Truth? Michael Eppel, Current History, 2014
The Kurdish national movement represents 25-30 million Kurds scattered in
Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria. The rise of ISIS and the civil conflict in
Syria has provided the Kurds with one of the most favorable opportunities
to consolidate the existence of autonomous regions and possibly the
creation of an independent Kurdistan. However, the United States, Turkey,
and the Arab states are opposed to the creation of an independent
Kurdistan.
The New Russian Chill in the Baltic, Mark Kramer, Current History, 2015
Russia's annexation of the Crimea and intervention in Eastern Ukraine has
raised concerns about NATO's commitment under article 5 of its Charter to
defend the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia.2014 has seen an
increase in the quantity and intensity of Russian military provocations
against the Baltic States, which has also raised concerns in Poland.
Finland and Sweden in reaction, are also considering joining NATO.
The Cuban Missile Crisis at 50: Lessons for U.S. Foreign Policy Today,
Graham Allison, Foreign Affairs, 2012
Lessons learned from the Cuban missile crisis can be applied to the problem
of the proliferation of nuclear weapons. The best way to prevent Iran from
developing the bomb is to lengthen the time for the development of the
bomb, focus on transparency measures to prevent cheating, and threaten
regime change if an agreement is violated. The Israeli factor makes the
Iranian nuclear situation more complex.
UNIT: Ethics and Values
Xi's Corruption Crackdown: How Bribery and Graft Threaten the Chinese Dream
, James Leung, Foreign Affairs, 2015
Chinese President Xi Jinping has cast corruption as an existential threat.
Corruption can lead to the collapse of the Chinese Communist party and the
downfall of the state. Corruption is a deeply rooted cultural phenomenon.
The G-Word: The Armenian Massacre and the Politics of Genocide, Thomas de
Waal, Foreign Affairs, 2015
2015 marks 100 years since the Armenian community in Ottoman Turkey faced
efforts on the part of the Turkish government to destroy it. Over one
million Armenians perished in the genocide. For strategic reasons, because
Turkey is a major U.S. ally, Washington refuses to use the G-word to
describe the great catastrophe which befell the Armenians.
Race in the Modern World: The Problem of the Color Line, Kwame Anthony
Appiah, Foreign Affairs, 2015
The author discusses various efforts that have been made over the years to
define race, with a great deal of emphasis placed on the work of W. E. B.
Du Bois. Du Bois discussed race as a transnational phenomenon as
illustrated by demonstrations in Nigeria protesting the shooting by a
police officer of an unarmed black teenager, Michael Brown, in Ferguson,
Missouri.
The Surveillance State and Its Discontents, Anonymous, Foreign Policy, 2013
There is a struggle between those who wish to use information "to harness
the web in the name of national security, those working to bring it under
the letter of the law, and those hoping to liberate it in the name of human
freedom."
UNIT: Global Issues in the Twenty-First Century: An Overview
Our Global Situation and Prospects for the Future, Jerome C. Glenn, The
Futurist, 2014
The Millennium State of the Future Report for 2014 emphasizes that humanity
continues to improve in general. People are becoming healthier, wealthier,
better educated, and more peaceful. However, the international community
needs to reduce income inequality in order to avoid long-term instability.
The author concludes with a series of recommendations for improving the
human condition based on a global collective intelligence system.
The Geopolitics of Cyberspace after Snowden, Ron Deibert, Current History,
2015
The author discusses the environment in which the Internet functions and
the "digital exhaust" emitted by mobile devices which provide vast
quantities of metadata about each individual. The effect of Snowden's
revelations has raised the question of a free Internet as opposed to
control and censorship by state governments as they seek to restore
"technological sovereignty."
The Return of Geopolitics: The Revenge of the Revisionist Powers, Walter
Russell Mead, Foreign Affairs, 2014
The post-cold war settlement is being challenged by three revisionist
powers-Russia, China, and Iran. President Obama's vision of a world order
based on liberal democracy has been undermined by the return of
geopolitics. Russia, China, and Iran share in common the desire to curb
U.S. power.
The Once and Future Hegemon, Salvatore Babones, The National Interest, 2015
The author argues that the United States is not a declining hegemon,
because history shows that hegemony runs in cycles of hundreds of years
rather than decades. The rise of Chinese power as a strategic threat to the
United States has been overemphasized. The United States will continue as a
hegemon in alliance with other English-speaking states.
The Unraveling: How to Respond to a Disordered World, Richard N. Haass,
Foreign Affairs, 2014
The article focuses on the trend toward disorder in the international
system, as the post-cold war international order has broken down. The
disorder is the result of a combination of structural changes in the
international system and poor policy choices by U.S. leaders. The growing
disorder has been marked by a diffusion of power and the inability of the
United States to resolve various crises in the Middle East and on the
periphery of Asia.
A Kinder, Gentler Immigration Policy: Forget Comprehensive Reform--Let the
States Compete, Jagdish Bhagwati and Francisco Rivera-Batiz, Foreign
Affairs, 2013
Immigration reform will not eliminate illegal immigration and strict border
controls will not stop the flow. Consequently, states should take steps to
ease the lives of illegal immigrants.
The Information Revolution and Power, Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Current History,
2014
The author writes that there are two major power shifts in the 21st
century. A "horizontal transition" from East to West and "a vertical
diffusion of power from states to NGOs" which is being brought about by the
information revolution.
UNIT: Population, Natural Resources, and Climate Change
The New Population Bomb: The Four Megatrends That Will Change the World,
Jack A. Goldstone, Foreign Affairs, 2010
Over the next forty years, the relative demographic weight of the world's
developed countries will significantly drop as their workforce ages and
numerically declines. Most of the world's population growth will be
concentrated in the poorest countries. At the same time most of the world's
population will become urbanized. These four trends have significant
political and economic consequences.
Climate Change Politics on the Road to Paris, Lorraine Elliott, Current
History, 2015
A major meeting on climate change is scheduled to take place in Paris in
2015 to replace the Kyoto Protocol of 1997. Major differences still exist
between the developed and developing countries. The developed countries
have the responsibility to take the lead due to their historic contribution
to climate change and their financial and technical resources.
Welcome to the Revolution: Why Shale Is the Next Shale, Edward L. Morse,
Foreign Affairs, 2014
The author predicts that the use of shale oil by the United States will
make it the world's largest oil producer with profound geopolitical
implications.
Think Again: Climate Treaties, David Shorr, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Idealized multilateralism via climate treaty does not work because
countries should not be allowed to override environmental imperatives.
UNIT: The Global Political Economy
Think Again: European Decline, Mark Leonard and Hans Kundnani, Foreign
Policy, 2013
It may appear that Europe is down and out, but on closer examination
prospects for the economic future are far better than they look. The
reasons for this optimistic assessment are provided.
Broken BRICs, Ruchir Sharma, Foreign Affairs, 2012
One of the most talked-about trends in the global economy has been the
rapid economic growth of Brazil, Russia, India, and China-the so-called
BRIC countries. After the financial crisis of 2008, the pace of growth in
these countries has slowed. Forecasts that they would overtake the
developed countries' economies were premature. The author describes the
significant differences among these four countries as well as problems with
long-range economic forecasts.
The Roadblock: If the West Doesn't Shape Up, the Rest of the World Will
Just Go around It. Mohamed A. El-Erian, Foreign Policy, 2013
Developing countries are wired into a volatile international and economic
financial controlled by the West.
New World Order: Labor, Capital, and Ideas in the Power Law Economy, Erik
Brynjolfsson, Andrew McAfee, and Michael Spence, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Emphasis is on the importance of digital technology as creating innovation
and entrepreneurship in the era of globalization.
As Objects Go Online: The Promise (and Pitfalls) of the Internet of Things
, Neil Gershenfeld and J. P. Vasseur, Foreign Affairs, 2014
There will be profound implications for linking the digital and physical
worlds, where the Internet will transmit actual things.
Britain and Europe: The End of the Affair? Matthias Matthijs, Current
History, 2014
Britain is the closest to leaving the European Union than it has ever been
since joining it in 1973.
Is Africa's Land Up for Grabs? Roy Laishley, Africa Renewal Online, 2014
Large scale land acquisitions by foreign governments and multinationals in
Africa represent a new form of neocolonialism. Land grabs can have negative
effects on the ability of African governments to increase food production.
Land acquisitions need to be subject to "win-win" agreements between the
host government and foreign investors.
The Blood Cries Out, Jillian Keenan, Foreign Policy, 2015
The situation in Burundi bears careful watching as the central African
land-locked country may be on the verge of a civil war. There is
insufficient land for its burgeoning population which relies heavily on
farming for its subsistence. Burundi is one of the most densely populated
and poor countries in the world.
Can a Post-Crisis Country Survive in the Time of Ebola? Jordan Ryan,
Harvard International Review, 2015
The author discusses his personal experiences in Liberia during the Ebola
epidemic. Liberia already was a fragile, post-conflict society emerging
from a violent civil war. The author concludes with the lessons learned on
how to promote development in a post-conflict society that has experienced
an epidemic.
Can Africa Turn from Recovery to Development? Thandika Mkandawire, Current
History, 2014
The Washington consensus was inappropriate for Africa, but in the
post-Washington era, African states need to move from recovery to
accelerated development.
The Early Days of the Group of 77, Karl P. Sauvant, UN Chronicle, 2014
The author writes that the G-77 became an integral part of UNCTAD and was
one of the most important agents for the specialization of the developing
countries on matters relating to the international political economy.
The Mobile-Finance Revolution: How Cell Phones Can Spur Development, Jake
Kendall and Roger Voorhies, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Mobile cell phones have spread to 90% of the world's poor and can help to
eliminate poverty via the extension of micro-credit and banking services
and the promotion of entrepreneurial activity.
UNIT: Terrorism
ISIS Is Not a Terrorist Group: Why Counterterrorism Won't Stop the Latest
Jihadist Threat, Audrey Kurth Cronin, Foreign Affairs, 2015
ISIS is not a terrorist organization but rather a pseudo-state which
controls territory to establish a caliphate in the Middle East. The US
should pursue a policy of containment toward ISIS.
ISIS and the Third Wave of Jihadism, Fawaz A. Gerges, Current History, 2014
ISIS emerged as an offshoot of the branch of Al Qaeda in Iraq. It emerged
as a result of the grievances of the Sunnis' repression by the Shia regime
of former Prime Minister Maliki as well the failure of state institutions
in Iraq. ISIS continues to focus on se ctarian war as its priority in
waging war with extreme brutality and violence.
Fixing Fragile States, Dennis Blair, Ronald Neumann, and Eric Olson, The
National Interest, 2014
Since the 9/11 attacks, the United States has waged major postwar
reconstruction campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan and smaller programs in
other countries that harbor Al Qaeda affiliates. Much of the threat stems
from fragile states with weak institutions, higher rates of poverty, and
deep ethnic, religious, or tribal divisions.
UNIT: Conflict and Peace
The Growing Threat of Maritime Conflict, Michael T. Klare, Current History
, 2013
Prospects for conflict over disputed borders have declined, but conflict
over maritime boundaries is growing. A major reason for these conflicts is
energy consumers are increasingly reliant on offshore oil and gas deposits.
Time to Negotiate in Afghanistan, James Dobbins and Carter Malkasian,
Foreign Affairs, 2015
The article details the history of missed opportunities for peace
negotiations in Afghanistan, arguing that a tiny window of opportunity has
opened. A moderate faction favorable to negotiations was led by the late
leader of the Taliban, Mullah Omar. The authors conclude with five
recommendations the United States should take to move negotiations forward.
Water Wars: A Surprisingly Rare Source of Conflict, Gregory Dunn, Harvard
International Review, 2013
Competition for access to the increasingly scarce resource of freshwater
has surprisingly been mostly resolved through peaceful means via negotiated
treaties.
Taiwan's Dire Straits, John J. Mearsheimer, The National Interest, 2014
The rise of China in the international system will upset the balance of
power in Beijing's favor, with profound implications for Taiwan. China will
attempt to dominate Asia as a regional hegemon.
Why 1914 Still Matters, Norman Friedman, The US Naval Institute Proceedings
, 2014
There is a similarity in the outbreak of war between the United Kingdom and
Germany in 1914 and the possibility of war between the United States and
China given that both cases involved a naval arms race that challenged the
trading hegemon.
Russia's Latest Land Grab: How Putin Won Crimea and Lost Ukraine, Jeffrey
Mankoff, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Russian annexation of Crimea follows a pattern used in Georgia, Moldova,
and Azerbaijan that is designed to promote its strategic interests.
The Utility of Cyberpower, Kevin L. Parker, Military Review, 2014
The focus is on the relationship between cyberpower and cyberspace as the
military seeks to defend the national security of the United States against
cyberattacks.
U.N. Treaty Is First Aimed at Regulating Global Arms Sales, Neil
MacFarquhar, The New York Times, 2013
The General Assembly approved a treaty aimed at regulating the global trade
in conventional weapons. The opinions of both proponents and opponents of
the treaty are described.
Turkey at a Tipping Point, Jenny White, Current History, 2014
Turkey is no longer the pliant U.S. ally that it was during the Cold War.
Then it was controlled by the military. President Erdogan has established
civilian control over the military. Turkey is now a prosperous post-Ottoman
state with a global presence and reactive foreign policy.
Kurdish Nationalism's Moment of Truth? Michael Eppel, Current History, 2014
The Kurdish national movement represents 25-30 million Kurds scattered in
Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria. The rise of ISIS and the civil conflict in
Syria has provided the Kurds with one of the most favorable opportunities
to consolidate the existence of autonomous regions and possibly the
creation of an independent Kurdistan. However, the United States, Turkey,
and the Arab states are opposed to the creation of an independent
Kurdistan.
The New Russian Chill in the Baltic, Mark Kramer, Current History, 2015
Russia's annexation of the Crimea and intervention in Eastern Ukraine has
raised concerns about NATO's commitment under article 5 of its Charter to
defend the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia.2014 has seen an
increase in the quantity and intensity of Russian military provocations
against the Baltic States, which has also raised concerns in Poland.
Finland and Sweden in reaction, are also considering joining NATO.
The Cuban Missile Crisis at 50: Lessons for U.S. Foreign Policy Today,
Graham Allison, Foreign Affairs, 2012
Lessons learned from the Cuban missile crisis can be applied to the problem
of the proliferation of nuclear weapons. The best way to prevent Iran from
developing the bomb is to lengthen the time for the development of the
bomb, focus on transparency measures to prevent cheating, and threaten
regime change if an agreement is violated. The Israeli factor makes the
Iranian nuclear situation more complex.
UNIT: Ethics and Values
Xi's Corruption Crackdown: How Bribery and Graft Threaten the Chinese Dream
, James Leung, Foreign Affairs, 2015
Chinese President Xi Jinping has cast corruption as an existential threat.
Corruption can lead to the collapse of the Chinese Communist party and the
downfall of the state. Corruption is a deeply rooted cultural phenomenon.
The G-Word: The Armenian Massacre and the Politics of Genocide, Thomas de
Waal, Foreign Affairs, 2015
2015 marks 100 years since the Armenian community in Ottoman Turkey faced
efforts on the part of the Turkish government to destroy it. Over one
million Armenians perished in the genocide. For strategic reasons, because
Turkey is a major U.S. ally, Washington refuses to use the G-word to
describe the great catastrophe which befell the Armenians.
Race in the Modern World: The Problem of the Color Line, Kwame Anthony
Appiah, Foreign Affairs, 2015
The author discusses various efforts that have been made over the years to
define race, with a great deal of emphasis placed on the work of W. E. B.
Du Bois. Du Bois discussed race as a transnational phenomenon as
illustrated by demonstrations in Nigeria protesting the shooting by a
police officer of an unarmed black teenager, Michael Brown, in Ferguson,
Missouri.
The Surveillance State and Its Discontents, Anonymous, Foreign Policy, 2013
There is a struggle between those who wish to use information "to harness
the web in the name of national security, those working to bring it under
the letter of the law, and those hoping to liberate it in the name of human
freedom."
Our Global Situation and Prospects for the Future, Jerome C. Glenn, The
Futurist, 2014
The Millennium State of the Future Report for 2014 emphasizes that humanity
continues to improve in general. People are becoming healthier, wealthier,
better educated, and more peaceful. However, the international community
needs to reduce income inequality in order to avoid long-term instability.
The author concludes with a series of recommendations for improving the
human condition based on a global collective intelligence system.
The Geopolitics of Cyberspace after Snowden, Ron Deibert, Current History,
2015
The author discusses the environment in which the Internet functions and
the "digital exhaust" emitted by mobile devices which provide vast
quantities of metadata about each individual. The effect of Snowden's
revelations has raised the question of a free Internet as opposed to
control and censorship by state governments as they seek to restore
"technological sovereignty."
The Return of Geopolitics: The Revenge of the Revisionist Powers, Walter
Russell Mead, Foreign Affairs, 2014
The post-cold war settlement is being challenged by three revisionist
powers-Russia, China, and Iran. President Obama's vision of a world order
based on liberal democracy has been undermined by the return of
geopolitics. Russia, China, and Iran share in common the desire to curb
U.S. power.
The Once and Future Hegemon, Salvatore Babones, The National Interest, 2015
The author argues that the United States is not a declining hegemon,
because history shows that hegemony runs in cycles of hundreds of years
rather than decades. The rise of Chinese power as a strategic threat to the
United States has been overemphasized. The United States will continue as a
hegemon in alliance with other English-speaking states.
The Unraveling: How to Respond to a Disordered World, Richard N. Haass,
Foreign Affairs, 2014
The article focuses on the trend toward disorder in the international
system, as the post-cold war international order has broken down. The
disorder is the result of a combination of structural changes in the
international system and poor policy choices by U.S. leaders. The growing
disorder has been marked by a diffusion of power and the inability of the
United States to resolve various crises in the Middle East and on the
periphery of Asia.
A Kinder, Gentler Immigration Policy: Forget Comprehensive Reform--Let the
States Compete, Jagdish Bhagwati and Francisco Rivera-Batiz, Foreign
Affairs, 2013
Immigration reform will not eliminate illegal immigration and strict border
controls will not stop the flow. Consequently, states should take steps to
ease the lives of illegal immigrants.
The Information Revolution and Power, Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Current History,
2014
The author writes that there are two major power shifts in the 21st
century. A "horizontal transition" from East to West and "a vertical
diffusion of power from states to NGOs" which is being brought about by the
information revolution.
UNIT: Population, Natural Resources, and Climate Change
The New Population Bomb: The Four Megatrends That Will Change the World,
Jack A. Goldstone, Foreign Affairs, 2010
Over the next forty years, the relative demographic weight of the world's
developed countries will significantly drop as their workforce ages and
numerically declines. Most of the world's population growth will be
concentrated in the poorest countries. At the same time most of the world's
population will become urbanized. These four trends have significant
political and economic consequences.
Climate Change Politics on the Road to Paris, Lorraine Elliott, Current
History, 2015
A major meeting on climate change is scheduled to take place in Paris in
2015 to replace the Kyoto Protocol of 1997. Major differences still exist
between the developed and developing countries. The developed countries
have the responsibility to take the lead due to their historic contribution
to climate change and their financial and technical resources.
Welcome to the Revolution: Why Shale Is the Next Shale, Edward L. Morse,
Foreign Affairs, 2014
The author predicts that the use of shale oil by the United States will
make it the world's largest oil producer with profound geopolitical
implications.
Think Again: Climate Treaties, David Shorr, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Idealized multilateralism via climate treaty does not work because
countries should not be allowed to override environmental imperatives.
UNIT: The Global Political Economy
Think Again: European Decline, Mark Leonard and Hans Kundnani, Foreign
Policy, 2013
It may appear that Europe is down and out, but on closer examination
prospects for the economic future are far better than they look. The
reasons for this optimistic assessment are provided.
Broken BRICs, Ruchir Sharma, Foreign Affairs, 2012
One of the most talked-about trends in the global economy has been the
rapid economic growth of Brazil, Russia, India, and China-the so-called
BRIC countries. After the financial crisis of 2008, the pace of growth in
these countries has slowed. Forecasts that they would overtake the
developed countries' economies were premature. The author describes the
significant differences among these four countries as well as problems with
long-range economic forecasts.
The Roadblock: If the West Doesn't Shape Up, the Rest of the World Will
Just Go around It. Mohamed A. El-Erian, Foreign Policy, 2013
Developing countries are wired into a volatile international and economic
financial controlled by the West.
New World Order: Labor, Capital, and Ideas in the Power Law Economy, Erik
Brynjolfsson, Andrew McAfee, and Michael Spence, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Emphasis is on the importance of digital technology as creating innovation
and entrepreneurship in the era of globalization.
As Objects Go Online: The Promise (and Pitfalls) of the Internet of Things
, Neil Gershenfeld and J. P. Vasseur, Foreign Affairs, 2014
There will be profound implications for linking the digital and physical
worlds, where the Internet will transmit actual things.
Britain and Europe: The End of the Affair? Matthias Matthijs, Current
History, 2014
Britain is the closest to leaving the European Union than it has ever been
since joining it in 1973.
Is Africa's Land Up for Grabs? Roy Laishley, Africa Renewal Online, 2014
Large scale land acquisitions by foreign governments and multinationals in
Africa represent a new form of neocolonialism. Land grabs can have negative
effects on the ability of African governments to increase food production.
Land acquisitions need to be subject to "win-win" agreements between the
host government and foreign investors.
The Blood Cries Out, Jillian Keenan, Foreign Policy, 2015
The situation in Burundi bears careful watching as the central African
land-locked country may be on the verge of a civil war. There is
insufficient land for its burgeoning population which relies heavily on
farming for its subsistence. Burundi is one of the most densely populated
and poor countries in the world.
Can a Post-Crisis Country Survive in the Time of Ebola? Jordan Ryan,
Harvard International Review, 2015
The author discusses his personal experiences in Liberia during the Ebola
epidemic. Liberia already was a fragile, post-conflict society emerging
from a violent civil war. The author concludes with the lessons learned on
how to promote development in a post-conflict society that has experienced
an epidemic.
Can Africa Turn from Recovery to Development? Thandika Mkandawire, Current
History, 2014
The Washington consensus was inappropriate for Africa, but in the
post-Washington era, African states need to move from recovery to
accelerated development.
The Early Days of the Group of 77, Karl P. Sauvant, UN Chronicle, 2014
The author writes that the G-77 became an integral part of UNCTAD and was
one of the most important agents for the specialization of the developing
countries on matters relating to the international political economy.
The Mobile-Finance Revolution: How Cell Phones Can Spur Development, Jake
Kendall and Roger Voorhies, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Mobile cell phones have spread to 90% of the world's poor and can help to
eliminate poverty via the extension of micro-credit and banking services
and the promotion of entrepreneurial activity.
UNIT: Terrorism
ISIS Is Not a Terrorist Group: Why Counterterrorism Won't Stop the Latest
Jihadist Threat, Audrey Kurth Cronin, Foreign Affairs, 2015
ISIS is not a terrorist organization but rather a pseudo-state which
controls territory to establish a caliphate in the Middle East. The US
should pursue a policy of containment toward ISIS.
ISIS and the Third Wave of Jihadism, Fawaz A. Gerges, Current History, 2014
ISIS emerged as an offshoot of the branch of Al Qaeda in Iraq. It emerged
as a result of the grievances of the Sunnis' repression by the Shia regime
of former Prime Minister Maliki as well the failure of state institutions
in Iraq. ISIS continues to focus on se ctarian war as its priority in
waging war with extreme brutality and violence.
Fixing Fragile States, Dennis Blair, Ronald Neumann, and Eric Olson, The
National Interest, 2014
Since the 9/11 attacks, the United States has waged major postwar
reconstruction campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan and smaller programs in
other countries that harbor Al Qaeda affiliates. Much of the threat stems
from fragile states with weak institutions, higher rates of poverty, and
deep ethnic, religious, or tribal divisions.
UNIT: Conflict and Peace
The Growing Threat of Maritime Conflict, Michael T. Klare, Current History
, 2013
Prospects for conflict over disputed borders have declined, but conflict
over maritime boundaries is growing. A major reason for these conflicts is
energy consumers are increasingly reliant on offshore oil and gas deposits.
Time to Negotiate in Afghanistan, James Dobbins and Carter Malkasian,
Foreign Affairs, 2015
The article details the history of missed opportunities for peace
negotiations in Afghanistan, arguing that a tiny window of opportunity has
opened. A moderate faction favorable to negotiations was led by the late
leader of the Taliban, Mullah Omar. The authors conclude with five
recommendations the United States should take to move negotiations forward.
Water Wars: A Surprisingly Rare Source of Conflict, Gregory Dunn, Harvard
International Review, 2013
Competition for access to the increasingly scarce resource of freshwater
has surprisingly been mostly resolved through peaceful means via negotiated
treaties.
Taiwan's Dire Straits, John J. Mearsheimer, The National Interest, 2014
The rise of China in the international system will upset the balance of
power in Beijing's favor, with profound implications for Taiwan. China will
attempt to dominate Asia as a regional hegemon.
Why 1914 Still Matters, Norman Friedman, The US Naval Institute Proceedings
, 2014
There is a similarity in the outbreak of war between the United Kingdom and
Germany in 1914 and the possibility of war between the United States and
China given that both cases involved a naval arms race that challenged the
trading hegemon.
Russia's Latest Land Grab: How Putin Won Crimea and Lost Ukraine, Jeffrey
Mankoff, Foreign Affairs, 2014
Russian annexation of Crimea follows a pattern used in Georgia, Moldova,
and Azerbaijan that is designed to promote its strategic interests.
The Utility of Cyberpower, Kevin L. Parker, Military Review, 2014
The focus is on the relationship between cyberpower and cyberspace as the
military seeks to defend the national security of the United States against
cyberattacks.
U.N. Treaty Is First Aimed at Regulating Global Arms Sales, Neil
MacFarquhar, The New York Times, 2013
The General Assembly approved a treaty aimed at regulating the global trade
in conventional weapons. The opinions of both proponents and opponents of
the treaty are described.
Turkey at a Tipping Point, Jenny White, Current History, 2014
Turkey is no longer the pliant U.S. ally that it was during the Cold War.
Then it was controlled by the military. President Erdogan has established
civilian control over the military. Turkey is now a prosperous post-Ottoman
state with a global presence and reactive foreign policy.
Kurdish Nationalism's Moment of Truth? Michael Eppel, Current History, 2014
The Kurdish national movement represents 25-30 million Kurds scattered in
Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria. The rise of ISIS and the civil conflict in
Syria has provided the Kurds with one of the most favorable opportunities
to consolidate the existence of autonomous regions and possibly the
creation of an independent Kurdistan. However, the United States, Turkey,
and the Arab states are opposed to the creation of an independent
Kurdistan.
The New Russian Chill in the Baltic, Mark Kramer, Current History, 2015
Russia's annexation of the Crimea and intervention in Eastern Ukraine has
raised concerns about NATO's commitment under article 5 of its Charter to
defend the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia.2014 has seen an
increase in the quantity and intensity of Russian military provocations
against the Baltic States, which has also raised concerns in Poland.
Finland and Sweden in reaction, are also considering joining NATO.
The Cuban Missile Crisis at 50: Lessons for U.S. Foreign Policy Today,
Graham Allison, Foreign Affairs, 2012
Lessons learned from the Cuban missile crisis can be applied to the problem
of the proliferation of nuclear weapons. The best way to prevent Iran from
developing the bomb is to lengthen the time for the development of the
bomb, focus on transparency measures to prevent cheating, and threaten
regime change if an agreement is violated. The Israeli factor makes the
Iranian nuclear situation more complex.
UNIT: Ethics and Values
Xi's Corruption Crackdown: How Bribery and Graft Threaten the Chinese Dream
, James Leung, Foreign Affairs, 2015
Chinese President Xi Jinping has cast corruption as an existential threat.
Corruption can lead to the collapse of the Chinese Communist party and the
downfall of the state. Corruption is a deeply rooted cultural phenomenon.
The G-Word: The Armenian Massacre and the Politics of Genocide, Thomas de
Waal, Foreign Affairs, 2015
2015 marks 100 years since the Armenian community in Ottoman Turkey faced
efforts on the part of the Turkish government to destroy it. Over one
million Armenians perished in the genocide. For strategic reasons, because
Turkey is a major U.S. ally, Washington refuses to use the G-word to
describe the great catastrophe which befell the Armenians.
Race in the Modern World: The Problem of the Color Line, Kwame Anthony
Appiah, Foreign Affairs, 2015
The author discusses various efforts that have been made over the years to
define race, with a great deal of emphasis placed on the work of W. E. B.
Du Bois. Du Bois discussed race as a transnational phenomenon as
illustrated by demonstrations in Nigeria protesting the shooting by a
police officer of an unarmed black teenager, Michael Brown, in Ferguson,
Missouri.
The Surveillance State and Its Discontents, Anonymous, Foreign Policy, 2013
There is a struggle between those who wish to use information "to harness
the web in the name of national security, those working to bring it under
the letter of the law, and those hoping to liberate it in the name of human
freedom."