- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
The Taking Sides Collection on McGraw-Hill Create® includes current controversial issues in a debate-style format designed to stimulate student interest and develop critical thinking skills. This Collection contains a multitude of current and classic issues to enhance and customize your course. You can browse the entire Taking Sides Collection on Create or you can search by topic, author, or keywords. Each Taking Sides issue is thoughtfully framed with Learning Outcomes, an Issue Summary, an Introduction, and an "Exploring the Issue" section featuring Critical Thinking and Reflection, Is There…mehr
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Global Issues62,99 €
- Greening Growth in Asia and the Pacific: Follow-Up to the World Summit on Sustainable Development: Taking Action on the Regional Implementation Plan f43,99 €
- Mira KamdarPlanet India20,99 €
- New Zealand-New Caledonia: Neighbours, Friends, Partners: La Nouvelle-Zélande Et La Nouvelle-Calédonie: Voisins, Amis Et Partenaires29,99 €
- Impact of Global Issues on International Trade201,99 €
- Daily Consular And Trade Reports, Issues 3013-306231,99 €
- Agricultural Trade Reform and Poverty in the Asia Pacific: A Survey and Some New Results15,99 €
-
-
-
The Taking Sides Collection on McGraw-Hill Create® includes current controversial issues in a debate-style format designed to stimulate student interest and develop critical thinking skills. This Collection contains a multitude of current and classic issues to enhance and customize your course. You can browse the entire Taking Sides Collection on Create or you can search by topic, author, or keywords. Each Taking Sides issue is thoughtfully framed with Learning Outcomes, an Issue Summary, an Introduction, and an "Exploring the Issue" section featuring Critical Thinking and Reflection, Is There Common Ground?, Additional Resources, and Internet References. Go to the Taking Sides Collection on McGraw-Hill Create® at www.mcgrawhillcreate.com/takingsides and click on "Explore this Collection" to browse the entire Collection. Select individual Taking Sides issues to enhance your course, or access and select the entire Harf/Lombardi/Harf: Taking Sides: Clashing Views on Global Issues, 10/e book here http://create.mheducation.com/createonline/index.html#qlink=search%2Ftext%3Disbn:126020622X for an easy, pre-built teaching resource. Visit http://create.mheducation.com for more information on other McGraw-Hill titles and special collections.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: McGraw Hill LLC
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. November 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 274mm x 216mm x 10mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9781260206227
- ISBN-10: 126020622X
- Artikelnr.: 53779654
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: McGraw Hill LLC
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. November 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 274mm x 216mm x 10mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9781260206227
- ISBN-10: 126020622X
- Artikelnr.: 53779654
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Unit 1: Global Population and Resources
Issue: Is Global Aging a Major Problem?
Yes: Richard Jackson, from "Global Aging and the Outlook for Growth and
Stability in the Developing World," Global Aging Institute (2017)
No: Maurizio Bussolo, Johannes Koettl, and Emily Sinnott, from "Golden
Aging: Prospects for Healthy, Active, and Prosperous Aging in Europe and
Central Asia," World Bank Group (2015)
Richard Jackson, president of the Global Aging Institute (GAI) and formerly
of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, argues that
demographic trends have affected "the great upheavals of history" from time
to time. He points to the upcoming 2020s as a watershed decade when
widespread disruptions are likely again to occur. For Jackson, during this
next decade, global aging is likely to have a major negative effect on
"economic growth, social and political stability, and the shape of the
world order." The World Bank study authors call into question the old adage
that demographic trends such as global aging, once put into motion, cannot
be stopped and typically lead to increased economic costs. They suggest,
for example, that aging societies "are not destined to experience
stagnation or decline in living standards." They argue instead that aging
"creates many opportunities, including opportunities to increase labor
productivity and the quality of education."
Issue: Will the World Be Able to Feed Itself in the Foreseeable Future?
Yes: Shenggen Fan, from "Progress, Uncertainty and Rising Antiglobalism,"
2018 Global Food Policy Report, International Food Policy Research
Institute (2018)
No: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, IFAD, UNICEF,
WFP and WHO, from "2017: The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the
World: Building Resilience for Peace and Food Security," Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2017)
Shenggen Fan, director general of the International Food Policy Research
Institute, presents a generally positive outlook on the ability of the
global food system to provide sufficient food for the world's population
despite a number of non-food related intrusions that negatively affect the
global capacity of the world's food system. The UN Food and Agriculture
Organization report, on the other hand, looks to an increase in the world's
chronically undernourished people, from an estimated 717 million in 2015 to
815 million in 2017, as a barometer for revealing a worsening situation, in
particular in parts of sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and West Asia.
Given the prevalence of conflict throughout the globe and the increase in
climate-related shocks to the food system, two major deterrents to food
security, the authors' despair of providing adequate food for all without
"renewed efforts through new ways of thinking."
Issue: Can the Global Community Successfully Confront the Global Water
Shortage?
Yes: "The United Nations World Water Development Report 2018: Nature-Based
Solutions for Water," United Nations World Assessment Programme (2018)
No: Lisa Guppy and Kelsey Anderson, from "Global Water Crisis: The Facts,"
United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment, and Health
(2017)
The report suggests that "solutions may be closer than we think" to solving
the problem of more than 2 billion people lacking access to safe drinking
water and more than double that amount having no access to safe sanitation.
The key, according to the Report, is to use nature to create a
cost-effective way to address these problems while also providing
"environmental, social, and economic benefits." The authors point out that
water has been a pressing concern and in some areas of the world, a
"critical national concern." They argue that business as usual will result
in the failure of the international community to address goals created by
international bodies regarding adequate water supplies. The report examines
the water crisis from six inter-related contexts "water scarcity and
insecurity; water-related disasters; water, sanitation, and health crisis;
water infrastructure deterioration and destruction; unsustainable
development; and ecosystem degradation."
Issue: Is the Global Oil Crisis of the Last Half-century Over?
Yes: "World Energy Outlook 2017," International Energy Agency (2017)
No: Chris Martenson, from "The Looming Energy Shock: The Next Oil Crisis
Will Arrive in 3 years or Less," PeakProsperity.com (2017)
In this current review of the world's energy outlook, the International
Energy Agency, an autonomous UN agency established in 1974, surveys the
current global energy system. The report points to four "large-scale
shifts" in the system: "the rapid deployment and falling costs of clean
energy technologies . . . the growing electrification of energy ... the
shift to a more service-oriented economy and a cleaner energy mix in China
... and the resilience of shale gas and tight oil in the United States."
The Report concludes that these are good signs for the world's attempts to
address non-renewable energy resources such as oil. Chris Martenson, a
fellow at the Post Carbon Institute, presents a forceful argument that
within a couple of years, either the world economy will outgrow the supply
of oil or the economy will collapse, both undesirable outcomes.
Issue: Is the Paris Climate Change Agreement Working?
Yes: Todd Stern, from "Why the Paris Agreement Works," The Brookings
Institution (2017)
No: Kelly Levin and Taryn Fransen, from "Understanding the 'Emissions Gap'
in 5 Charts," World Resources Institute (2017)
Todd Stern, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, suggests that the
negotiated agreement had to clear eight distinct hurdles. He argues that
the final agreement was successful in overcoming all of them and provides
arguments for his position. He concludes that, unlike all attempts in the
previous 20 years, this agreement breaks new ground that "needs to be
defended, supported and implemented." His bottom line is that the agreement
is working. The World Resources Institute report co-authored by Senior
Associate Kelly Levin and Senior Fellow Taryn Fransen uses five charts to
explain the "emissions gap,' the "difference between the emissions level
countries have pledged to achieve ... and the level consistent with
limiting warming to well below 2 degrees."
Unit 2: Expanding Global Forces and Movements
Issue: Will The International Community Be Able To Successfully Address The
Next Global Pandemic?
Yes: Arthur G. Fitzmaurice, et al., from "Contributions of the US Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention in Implementing the Global Health
Security Agenda in 17 Partner Countries," Emerging Infectious Diseases
(2017)
No: Meera Senthilingam, from "Seven Reasons We're at More Risk than Ever of
a Global Pandemic," CNN (2017)
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention article describes the
efforts of the Global Health Security Agenda, a partnership among a variety
of national governments and both international governmental and
non-governmental organizations to increase the capacities of countries to
respond to infectious disease pandemics around the globe. Launched in 2014,
the partnership has made significant progress in helping 17 countries
achieve a list of stated objectives. Meera Senthilingam, Editor for CNN
Health and Wellness, points to the view of public health experts that the
world is at a greater risk than ever before in history of a global pandemic
along the magnitude of SARS, swine flu, Ebola, and Zika. Seven major global
trends, the author suggests, contribute to the increased likelihood and
magnitude of such pandemics.
Issue: Do Adequate Strategies Exist to Combat Human Trafficking?
Yes: Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, from "Meeting the
Global Challenge: Effective Strategies to Prevent Human Trafficking,"
Trafficking in Persons Report 2016, U.S. Department of State (2016)
No: United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), from "Global Report
on Trafficking in Persons 2016," Austria: United Nations (2016)
The U.S. Department of State Report describes its two decades effort to
combat human trafficking, focusing on the three Ps-prosecution, protection,
and protection. While the report discusses challenges to the State
Department's efforts, it focuses on success stories and examples in the
fight against human trafficking. The 2016 United Nations Office on Drugs
and Crime report spells out the magnitude of the problem with the
compilation of major data collected about human trafficking. The most
worrisome development since the previous report is the increase in the
movement of refugees and migrants.
Issue: Is Saudi Arabia Moving toward Increased Democratization and/or
Liberalization?
Yes: Thomas L. Friedman, from "Saudi Arabia's Arab Spring, At Last," The
New York Times (2017)
No: "Freedom in the World 2018: Democracy in Crisis," Freedom House (2018)
Thomas L. Friedman, a long-time analyst of the Middle East, argues that the
most significant reforms taking place in the regi on today are in Saudi
Arabia, mainly due to the efforts of the young, controversial Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman. Friedman travels to the Kingdom to interview the Crown
Prince and Saudi citizens about these religious and economic reforms. He
comes away from these conversations convinced the country is moving in a
more liberal, open direction. Freedom House is a U.S. government-funded
non-governmental organization that annually assesses a country's degree of
political freedoms and civil liberties. It relies on a large number of
reputable analysts and academic advisors, and subjects its methodology to
public examination by experts. Its most recent analysis for Saudi Arabia
concludes that the country's status is "Not Free" and documented examples
of crackdowns on reform advocates.
Issue: Is Artificial Intelligence a Threat to Humanity?
Yes: Tim Adams, from "Artificial Intelligence: 'We're like Children Playing
with a Bomb,' " The Guardian (2016)
No: Max Tegmark, from "Benefits and Risks of Artificial Intelligence,"
Future of Life Institute (2018)
Tim Adams, in relaying the thoughts of Oxford philosopher Nick Bostrom,
contends that AI represents an existential threat to humanity because AI
will develop the ability to replicate its intelligence and learn at a much
faster rate than humans. Max Tegmark, an MIT professor, contends that AI
can and will be a great boon for humanity and will be shaped by its ability
to problem solve and not by some myth regarding its own capacity to "turn
on" humanity at some point.
Issue: Is the West Losing the Global Information War?
Yes: Alina Polyakova and Spencer P. Boyer, from "The Future of Political
Warfare: Russia, the West, and the Coming Age of Global Digital
Competition," The New Geopolitics (2018)
No: Molly C. McKew, from "Putin's Real Long Game," Politico Magazine (2017)
The authors, both from The Brookings Institution, contend that we are at
the nexus of technology, big data and AI such that states and other
entities can now engage in political warfare without great consequences and
at low cost. They argue that this is exactly what Russia is engaged in
right now throughout Europe and the United States. The author, a former
advisor to the president of the country of Georgia, argues that the Russian
strategy is to so undermine truth and reality in the West so that basic
institutions and social order breaks down. The author articulates ways that
the West can thwart such actions and win.
Issue: Is Authoritarianism on the Rise or Will Democracy Endure?
Yes: Suzanne Sataline, from "Democracy Under Stress: Is Representative
Government in Retreat Worldwide?" CQ Researcher (2017)
No: Kurt Weyland and Raúl L. Madrid, from "Liberal Democracy Is Stronger
Than Trump's Populism," The American Interest (2017)
Suzanne Sataline, a writer based in Hong Kong, contends that if one looks
at the past 100 years of development, democracy is clearly in retreat and
under attack from a variety of social/political and technological forces.
Kurt Weyland and Raúl Madrid, both University of Texas professors, use the
growth populism in the West as represented by the election of Donald Trump
to argue that democracy is resilient, still strong and capable of thwarting
any permanent growth of authoritarianism.
Issue: Is the Power of Social Media Undermining Democracy?
Yes: Erica Chenoweth, from "How Social Media Helps Dictators," Foreign
Policy (2016)
No: Helen Margetts, from "Of Course Social Media Is Transforming Politics.
But It's Not to Blame for Brexit and Trump," World Economic Forum (2016)
Erica Chenoweth, University of Denver professor, contends that social media
has been hijacked in part by authoritarian and antidemocratic forces to sew
doubt and undermine democratic institutions around the globe. Helen
Margetts, professor at the Oxford Internet Institute of the University of
Oxford, argues that social media has been used for all kinds of reasons
both democratic, social justice and authoritarian but sounding the alarm
that it is now a force for anti-demotic impulses is overtaking its role and
missing the larger context.
Unit 3: The New Global Security Agenda
Issue: Were Efforts to Withdraw the United States from the Iran Nuclear
Agreement Misguided?
Yes: Philip Gordon and Richard Nephew, from "The 'Worst Deal Ever' That
Actually Wasn't," The Atlantic (2017)
No: "Remarks by President Trump on the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action,"
The White House (2018)
The authors, both policymakers who were part of the team that negotiated
the Iran nuclear deal, argue it is doing what it was supposed to do:
prevent Iran from acquiring enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon,
demonstrate to the Iranian public the benefits of cooperation with the
international community, and buy time for potential changes in Iranian
politics and foreign policy ¿ and therefore, efforts to walk away from the
agreement are misguided. In announcing that the United States was leaving
the Iran nuclear agreement, President Trump argued that the deal "allowed
Iran to continue enriching uranium and, over time, reach the brink of a
nuclear break¬out." He further stated that Iran's claim it desired a
peaceful nuclear program "was a lie." Furthermore, the President also
suggested that the deal failed to address Iran's development of ballistic
missiles and provides "inadequate mechanisms to prevent, detect, and punish
cheating . . . ."
Issue: Has the Assad Regime Won the Syrian Civil War?
Yes: Daniel R. DePetris, from "How Bashar al-Assad Won the War in Syria,"
The National Interest (2017)
No: Krishnadev Calamur, from "No One Is Winning the Syrian Civil War," The
Atlantic (2018)
Daniel R. DePetris, an analyst at Wikistrat, Inc., suggests that early in
the Syrian conflict it appeared that Assad was on his way out. But five
years later everything had been turned around and the world came to
understand "how wily, clever, and street-smart" the government had been all
along, leaving Assad in power with the help of Russian and Iranian support.
Krishnadev Calamur, a senior editor at The Atlantic, argues that President
Assad and his regime have not won the war. It is more accurate to say that
Russian, Iranian, and Kurdish forces have emerged as the victors. He writes
that Assad would not be able to survive in power on his own, without
Russian and Iranian support. And, while Assad's goal is to regain control
of the entire country, Syria as a unified nation has effectively collapsed.
Issue: Is a Two-state Diplomatic Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
Conflict Possible or Likely in the Near Future?
Yes: Mara Rudman and Brian Katulis, from "A Practical Plan on the
Israeli-Palestinian Front," Center for American Progress (2016)
No: Nickolay Mladenov, from "Security Council Briefing on the Situation in
the Middle East," UNESCO (2018)
The Center for American Progress study, authored by two experienced
government analysts who served under Democratic administrations, suggests
six building blocks for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
problem. The study's authors, respected scholars of Middle East affairs,
argue that despite a number of factors making a solution more difficult,
progress toward a two-state solution can be made if attention is paid to
these building blocks. Nicolay Mladenov, the UN Special Coordinator for the
Middle East Peace Process, suggests that it is a grim time for those
seeking peace in the Middle East. For him, "much of the Middle East
continues to be in the grips of an ongoing human tragedy of immense
proportions." He argues that those opposed to peace are gaining confidence
with each passing day, and they are hindering progress by pushing
unilateral facts on the ground that are "blocking the pathway back to the
negotiating table."
Issue: Is Russia Increasingly Pursuing a Strategy to Threaten Democratic
Regimes Throughout Europe and the Western World?
Yes: Larry Diamond, from "Russia and the Threat to Liberal Democracy," The
Atlantic (2016)
No: Mark Lawrence Schrad, from "Vladimir Putin Isn't a Supervillain,"
Foreign Policy (2017)
Larry Diamond, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and at the Freeman
Spogli Institute at Stanford University, argues that Putin "has embraced an
opportunistic but sophisticated campaign to sabotage democracy." For
Diamond, of greatest danger is the "alarming decay of liberal democracy in
Europe and the United States." Mark Lawrence Schrad, a Villanova University
professor, suggests that Western commentary on Russia's foreign policy can
be placed into two rather extreme camps. One approach calls Putin a global
menace while the other sees a country falling apart. Schrad argues that the
reality is somewhere in between. "Russia is not nearly the global menace
that many fear, nor is it doomed to collapse." Accordingly, he believes
that any analysis must be a "sober assessment of the country's capabilities
and limitations."
Issue: Will China Be the Next Global Superpower?
Yes: Kenneth Rapoza, from "The Future: China's Rise, America's Decline,"
Forbes (2017)
No: Alan Dupont, from "Will China Rule the World? Asian Superpower Faces
Uncertain Future," The Australian (2016)
Forbes writer Kenneth Rapoza argues that most economic and social
indicators point to both a steady rise for China and a decline for the
United States. When the crossover point occurs will be is anyone's guess.
Dupont contends that despite China's enormous gifs and potential, it still
faces great obstacles in its quest to move from regional dominance to true
superpower status.
Issue: Can Diplomacy, Rather than Military Action, Result in North Korea
Denuclearizing?
Yes: Uri Friedman, from "Here's What Trump Actually Achieved with North
Korea," The Atlantic (2018)
No: Brian Barrett, from "All the Times North Korea Promised to
Denuclearize," WIRED (2018)
Uri Freidman, global affairs staff writer at The Atlantic, argues a case
can be made that diplomacy might finally work this time in getting North
Korea to denuclearize after the latest round of negotiations at the leader
level. Among the author's six reasons for optimism is the fact that the two
countries are talking to each other at a political decision-maker
level-putting the politics first and at a very high level-and that any
North Korean denuclearization pledge such as this latest one is
significant. Brian Barrett, News Editor at WIRED, is not hopeful,
suggesting that this is simply another example of the pattern where North
Korea promises to "abandon nuclear efforts" with "surprising regularity"
and then does not follow through on its promises. He argues that North
Korea uses the promise of denuclearization as a "bargaining chip in times
of desperation" and details the multiple rounds of negotiations over the
past several decades that have all ended in failure.
Issue: Is Cyberwar the Future of 21st-Century Conflict?
Yes: Rick Stella, from "From Cyberwarfare to Drones, the Future of Conflict
Is Electronic," Digital Trends (2016)
No: Daniel Moore, from "Struggling with Cyber: A Critical Look at Waging
War Online," War on the Rocks (2017)
Rick Stella, Outdoor Editor of Digital Trends, makes the argument that in
the aftermath of 9/11, innovation and technology in warfare became of
paramount importance. As a result, cyber warfare has become the dominant
trend in weapons research, development and ultimately application. Daniel
Moore, a threat intelligence engineer, makes that case that it is too easy
to simply argue that if technology is sophisticated, then it means that all
warfare will be cyber. He maintains that one must define one's terms before
hitting the default button that all warfare is moving in a cyber direction.
Issue: Is Nuclear War More Likely in the Next Decade?
Yes: John F. Harris and Bryan Bender, from "Bill Perry Is Terrified. Why
Aren't You?" Politico Magazine (2017)
No: Stephen M. Walt, from "The World Doesn't Need Any More Nuclear
Strategies," Foreign Policy (2018)
The authors, both writers at Politico, through working with former
Secretary of Defense Bill Perry paint a pessimistic picture of the
likelihood of a nuclear war in the coming years due to issues such as
nuclear proliferation, great power rivalry and increasing tensions among
key global actors. Stephen Walt, Harvard professor at the JFK School of
Government, articulates a nuanced critique of nuclear politics but still
maintains that the use of the nuclear deterrent has and will continue to
make nuclear war less likely over time despite changes dimensions in the
current global landscape.
Issue: Is Global Aging a Major Problem?
Yes: Richard Jackson, from "Global Aging and the Outlook for Growth and
Stability in the Developing World," Global Aging Institute (2017)
No: Maurizio Bussolo, Johannes Koettl, and Emily Sinnott, from "Golden
Aging: Prospects for Healthy, Active, and Prosperous Aging in Europe and
Central Asia," World Bank Group (2015)
Richard Jackson, president of the Global Aging Institute (GAI) and formerly
of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, argues that
demographic trends have affected "the great upheavals of history" from time
to time. He points to the upcoming 2020s as a watershed decade when
widespread disruptions are likely again to occur. For Jackson, during this
next decade, global aging is likely to have a major negative effect on
"economic growth, social and political stability, and the shape of the
world order." The World Bank study authors call into question the old adage
that demographic trends such as global aging, once put into motion, cannot
be stopped and typically lead to increased economic costs. They suggest,
for example, that aging societies "are not destined to experience
stagnation or decline in living standards." They argue instead that aging
"creates many opportunities, including opportunities to increase labor
productivity and the quality of education."
Issue: Will the World Be Able to Feed Itself in the Foreseeable Future?
Yes: Shenggen Fan, from "Progress, Uncertainty and Rising Antiglobalism,"
2018 Global Food Policy Report, International Food Policy Research
Institute (2018)
No: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, IFAD, UNICEF,
WFP and WHO, from "2017: The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the
World: Building Resilience for Peace and Food Security," Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2017)
Shenggen Fan, director general of the International Food Policy Research
Institute, presents a generally positive outlook on the ability of the
global food system to provide sufficient food for the world's population
despite a number of non-food related intrusions that negatively affect the
global capacity of the world's food system. The UN Food and Agriculture
Organization report, on the other hand, looks to an increase in the world's
chronically undernourished people, from an estimated 717 million in 2015 to
815 million in 2017, as a barometer for revealing a worsening situation, in
particular in parts of sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and West Asia.
Given the prevalence of conflict throughout the globe and the increase in
climate-related shocks to the food system, two major deterrents to food
security, the authors' despair of providing adequate food for all without
"renewed efforts through new ways of thinking."
Issue: Can the Global Community Successfully Confront the Global Water
Shortage?
Yes: "The United Nations World Water Development Report 2018: Nature-Based
Solutions for Water," United Nations World Assessment Programme (2018)
No: Lisa Guppy and Kelsey Anderson, from "Global Water Crisis: The Facts,"
United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment, and Health
(2017)
The report suggests that "solutions may be closer than we think" to solving
the problem of more than 2 billion people lacking access to safe drinking
water and more than double that amount having no access to safe sanitation.
The key, according to the Report, is to use nature to create a
cost-effective way to address these problems while also providing
"environmental, social, and economic benefits." The authors point out that
water has been a pressing concern and in some areas of the world, a
"critical national concern." They argue that business as usual will result
in the failure of the international community to address goals created by
international bodies regarding adequate water supplies. The report examines
the water crisis from six inter-related contexts "water scarcity and
insecurity; water-related disasters; water, sanitation, and health crisis;
water infrastructure deterioration and destruction; unsustainable
development; and ecosystem degradation."
Issue: Is the Global Oil Crisis of the Last Half-century Over?
Yes: "World Energy Outlook 2017," International Energy Agency (2017)
No: Chris Martenson, from "The Looming Energy Shock: The Next Oil Crisis
Will Arrive in 3 years or Less," PeakProsperity.com (2017)
In this current review of the world's energy outlook, the International
Energy Agency, an autonomous UN agency established in 1974, surveys the
current global energy system. The report points to four "large-scale
shifts" in the system: "the rapid deployment and falling costs of clean
energy technologies . . . the growing electrification of energy ... the
shift to a more service-oriented economy and a cleaner energy mix in China
... and the resilience of shale gas and tight oil in the United States."
The Report concludes that these are good signs for the world's attempts to
address non-renewable energy resources such as oil. Chris Martenson, a
fellow at the Post Carbon Institute, presents a forceful argument that
within a couple of years, either the world economy will outgrow the supply
of oil or the economy will collapse, both undesirable outcomes.
Issue: Is the Paris Climate Change Agreement Working?
Yes: Todd Stern, from "Why the Paris Agreement Works," The Brookings
Institution (2017)
No: Kelly Levin and Taryn Fransen, from "Understanding the 'Emissions Gap'
in 5 Charts," World Resources Institute (2017)
Todd Stern, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, suggests that the
negotiated agreement had to clear eight distinct hurdles. He argues that
the final agreement was successful in overcoming all of them and provides
arguments for his position. He concludes that, unlike all attempts in the
previous 20 years, this agreement breaks new ground that "needs to be
defended, supported and implemented." His bottom line is that the agreement
is working. The World Resources Institute report co-authored by Senior
Associate Kelly Levin and Senior Fellow Taryn Fransen uses five charts to
explain the "emissions gap,' the "difference between the emissions level
countries have pledged to achieve ... and the level consistent with
limiting warming to well below 2 degrees."
Unit 2: Expanding Global Forces and Movements
Issue: Will The International Community Be Able To Successfully Address The
Next Global Pandemic?
Yes: Arthur G. Fitzmaurice, et al., from "Contributions of the US Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention in Implementing the Global Health
Security Agenda in 17 Partner Countries," Emerging Infectious Diseases
(2017)
No: Meera Senthilingam, from "Seven Reasons We're at More Risk than Ever of
a Global Pandemic," CNN (2017)
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention article describes the
efforts of the Global Health Security Agenda, a partnership among a variety
of national governments and both international governmental and
non-governmental organizations to increase the capacities of countries to
respond to infectious disease pandemics around the globe. Launched in 2014,
the partnership has made significant progress in helping 17 countries
achieve a list of stated objectives. Meera Senthilingam, Editor for CNN
Health and Wellness, points to the view of public health experts that the
world is at a greater risk than ever before in history of a global pandemic
along the magnitude of SARS, swine flu, Ebola, and Zika. Seven major global
trends, the author suggests, contribute to the increased likelihood and
magnitude of such pandemics.
Issue: Do Adequate Strategies Exist to Combat Human Trafficking?
Yes: Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, from "Meeting the
Global Challenge: Effective Strategies to Prevent Human Trafficking,"
Trafficking in Persons Report 2016, U.S. Department of State (2016)
No: United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), from "Global Report
on Trafficking in Persons 2016," Austria: United Nations (2016)
The U.S. Department of State Report describes its two decades effort to
combat human trafficking, focusing on the three Ps-prosecution, protection,
and protection. While the report discusses challenges to the State
Department's efforts, it focuses on success stories and examples in the
fight against human trafficking. The 2016 United Nations Office on Drugs
and Crime report spells out the magnitude of the problem with the
compilation of major data collected about human trafficking. The most
worrisome development since the previous report is the increase in the
movement of refugees and migrants.
Issue: Is Saudi Arabia Moving toward Increased Democratization and/or
Liberalization?
Yes: Thomas L. Friedman, from "Saudi Arabia's Arab Spring, At Last," The
New York Times (2017)
No: "Freedom in the World 2018: Democracy in Crisis," Freedom House (2018)
Thomas L. Friedman, a long-time analyst of the Middle East, argues that the
most significant reforms taking place in the regi on today are in Saudi
Arabia, mainly due to the efforts of the young, controversial Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman. Friedman travels to the Kingdom to interview the Crown
Prince and Saudi citizens about these religious and economic reforms. He
comes away from these conversations convinced the country is moving in a
more liberal, open direction. Freedom House is a U.S. government-funded
non-governmental organization that annually assesses a country's degree of
political freedoms and civil liberties. It relies on a large number of
reputable analysts and academic advisors, and subjects its methodology to
public examination by experts. Its most recent analysis for Saudi Arabia
concludes that the country's status is "Not Free" and documented examples
of crackdowns on reform advocates.
Issue: Is Artificial Intelligence a Threat to Humanity?
Yes: Tim Adams, from "Artificial Intelligence: 'We're like Children Playing
with a Bomb,' " The Guardian (2016)
No: Max Tegmark, from "Benefits and Risks of Artificial Intelligence,"
Future of Life Institute (2018)
Tim Adams, in relaying the thoughts of Oxford philosopher Nick Bostrom,
contends that AI represents an existential threat to humanity because AI
will develop the ability to replicate its intelligence and learn at a much
faster rate than humans. Max Tegmark, an MIT professor, contends that AI
can and will be a great boon for humanity and will be shaped by its ability
to problem solve and not by some myth regarding its own capacity to "turn
on" humanity at some point.
Issue: Is the West Losing the Global Information War?
Yes: Alina Polyakova and Spencer P. Boyer, from "The Future of Political
Warfare: Russia, the West, and the Coming Age of Global Digital
Competition," The New Geopolitics (2018)
No: Molly C. McKew, from "Putin's Real Long Game," Politico Magazine (2017)
The authors, both from The Brookings Institution, contend that we are at
the nexus of technology, big data and AI such that states and other
entities can now engage in political warfare without great consequences and
at low cost. They argue that this is exactly what Russia is engaged in
right now throughout Europe and the United States. The author, a former
advisor to the president of the country of Georgia, argues that the Russian
strategy is to so undermine truth and reality in the West so that basic
institutions and social order breaks down. The author articulates ways that
the West can thwart such actions and win.
Issue: Is Authoritarianism on the Rise or Will Democracy Endure?
Yes: Suzanne Sataline, from "Democracy Under Stress: Is Representative
Government in Retreat Worldwide?" CQ Researcher (2017)
No: Kurt Weyland and Raúl L. Madrid, from "Liberal Democracy Is Stronger
Than Trump's Populism," The American Interest (2017)
Suzanne Sataline, a writer based in Hong Kong, contends that if one looks
at the past 100 years of development, democracy is clearly in retreat and
under attack from a variety of social/political and technological forces.
Kurt Weyland and Raúl Madrid, both University of Texas professors, use the
growth populism in the West as represented by the election of Donald Trump
to argue that democracy is resilient, still strong and capable of thwarting
any permanent growth of authoritarianism.
Issue: Is the Power of Social Media Undermining Democracy?
Yes: Erica Chenoweth, from "How Social Media Helps Dictators," Foreign
Policy (2016)
No: Helen Margetts, from "Of Course Social Media Is Transforming Politics.
But It's Not to Blame for Brexit and Trump," World Economic Forum (2016)
Erica Chenoweth, University of Denver professor, contends that social media
has been hijacked in part by authoritarian and antidemocratic forces to sew
doubt and undermine democratic institutions around the globe. Helen
Margetts, professor at the Oxford Internet Institute of the University of
Oxford, argues that social media has been used for all kinds of reasons
both democratic, social justice and authoritarian but sounding the alarm
that it is now a force for anti-demotic impulses is overtaking its role and
missing the larger context.
Unit 3: The New Global Security Agenda
Issue: Were Efforts to Withdraw the United States from the Iran Nuclear
Agreement Misguided?
Yes: Philip Gordon and Richard Nephew, from "The 'Worst Deal Ever' That
Actually Wasn't," The Atlantic (2017)
No: "Remarks by President Trump on the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action,"
The White House (2018)
The authors, both policymakers who were part of the team that negotiated
the Iran nuclear deal, argue it is doing what it was supposed to do:
prevent Iran from acquiring enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon,
demonstrate to the Iranian public the benefits of cooperation with the
international community, and buy time for potential changes in Iranian
politics and foreign policy ¿ and therefore, efforts to walk away from the
agreement are misguided. In announcing that the United States was leaving
the Iran nuclear agreement, President Trump argued that the deal "allowed
Iran to continue enriching uranium and, over time, reach the brink of a
nuclear break¬out." He further stated that Iran's claim it desired a
peaceful nuclear program "was a lie." Furthermore, the President also
suggested that the deal failed to address Iran's development of ballistic
missiles and provides "inadequate mechanisms to prevent, detect, and punish
cheating . . . ."
Issue: Has the Assad Regime Won the Syrian Civil War?
Yes: Daniel R. DePetris, from "How Bashar al-Assad Won the War in Syria,"
The National Interest (2017)
No: Krishnadev Calamur, from "No One Is Winning the Syrian Civil War," The
Atlantic (2018)
Daniel R. DePetris, an analyst at Wikistrat, Inc., suggests that early in
the Syrian conflict it appeared that Assad was on his way out. But five
years later everything had been turned around and the world came to
understand "how wily, clever, and street-smart" the government had been all
along, leaving Assad in power with the help of Russian and Iranian support.
Krishnadev Calamur, a senior editor at The Atlantic, argues that President
Assad and his regime have not won the war. It is more accurate to say that
Russian, Iranian, and Kurdish forces have emerged as the victors. He writes
that Assad would not be able to survive in power on his own, without
Russian and Iranian support. And, while Assad's goal is to regain control
of the entire country, Syria as a unified nation has effectively collapsed.
Issue: Is a Two-state Diplomatic Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
Conflict Possible or Likely in the Near Future?
Yes: Mara Rudman and Brian Katulis, from "A Practical Plan on the
Israeli-Palestinian Front," Center for American Progress (2016)
No: Nickolay Mladenov, from "Security Council Briefing on the Situation in
the Middle East," UNESCO (2018)
The Center for American Progress study, authored by two experienced
government analysts who served under Democratic administrations, suggests
six building blocks for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
problem. The study's authors, respected scholars of Middle East affairs,
argue that despite a number of factors making a solution more difficult,
progress toward a two-state solution can be made if attention is paid to
these building blocks. Nicolay Mladenov, the UN Special Coordinator for the
Middle East Peace Process, suggests that it is a grim time for those
seeking peace in the Middle East. For him, "much of the Middle East
continues to be in the grips of an ongoing human tragedy of immense
proportions." He argues that those opposed to peace are gaining confidence
with each passing day, and they are hindering progress by pushing
unilateral facts on the ground that are "blocking the pathway back to the
negotiating table."
Issue: Is Russia Increasingly Pursuing a Strategy to Threaten Democratic
Regimes Throughout Europe and the Western World?
Yes: Larry Diamond, from "Russia and the Threat to Liberal Democracy," The
Atlantic (2016)
No: Mark Lawrence Schrad, from "Vladimir Putin Isn't a Supervillain,"
Foreign Policy (2017)
Larry Diamond, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and at the Freeman
Spogli Institute at Stanford University, argues that Putin "has embraced an
opportunistic but sophisticated campaign to sabotage democracy." For
Diamond, of greatest danger is the "alarming decay of liberal democracy in
Europe and the United States." Mark Lawrence Schrad, a Villanova University
professor, suggests that Western commentary on Russia's foreign policy can
be placed into two rather extreme camps. One approach calls Putin a global
menace while the other sees a country falling apart. Schrad argues that the
reality is somewhere in between. "Russia is not nearly the global menace
that many fear, nor is it doomed to collapse." Accordingly, he believes
that any analysis must be a "sober assessment of the country's capabilities
and limitations."
Issue: Will China Be the Next Global Superpower?
Yes: Kenneth Rapoza, from "The Future: China's Rise, America's Decline,"
Forbes (2017)
No: Alan Dupont, from "Will China Rule the World? Asian Superpower Faces
Uncertain Future," The Australian (2016)
Forbes writer Kenneth Rapoza argues that most economic and social
indicators point to both a steady rise for China and a decline for the
United States. When the crossover point occurs will be is anyone's guess.
Dupont contends that despite China's enormous gifs and potential, it still
faces great obstacles in its quest to move from regional dominance to true
superpower status.
Issue: Can Diplomacy, Rather than Military Action, Result in North Korea
Denuclearizing?
Yes: Uri Friedman, from "Here's What Trump Actually Achieved with North
Korea," The Atlantic (2018)
No: Brian Barrett, from "All the Times North Korea Promised to
Denuclearize," WIRED (2018)
Uri Freidman, global affairs staff writer at The Atlantic, argues a case
can be made that diplomacy might finally work this time in getting North
Korea to denuclearize after the latest round of negotiations at the leader
level. Among the author's six reasons for optimism is the fact that the two
countries are talking to each other at a political decision-maker
level-putting the politics first and at a very high level-and that any
North Korean denuclearization pledge such as this latest one is
significant. Brian Barrett, News Editor at WIRED, is not hopeful,
suggesting that this is simply another example of the pattern where North
Korea promises to "abandon nuclear efforts" with "surprising regularity"
and then does not follow through on its promises. He argues that North
Korea uses the promise of denuclearization as a "bargaining chip in times
of desperation" and details the multiple rounds of negotiations over the
past several decades that have all ended in failure.
Issue: Is Cyberwar the Future of 21st-Century Conflict?
Yes: Rick Stella, from "From Cyberwarfare to Drones, the Future of Conflict
Is Electronic," Digital Trends (2016)
No: Daniel Moore, from "Struggling with Cyber: A Critical Look at Waging
War Online," War on the Rocks (2017)
Rick Stella, Outdoor Editor of Digital Trends, makes the argument that in
the aftermath of 9/11, innovation and technology in warfare became of
paramount importance. As a result, cyber warfare has become the dominant
trend in weapons research, development and ultimately application. Daniel
Moore, a threat intelligence engineer, makes that case that it is too easy
to simply argue that if technology is sophisticated, then it means that all
warfare will be cyber. He maintains that one must define one's terms before
hitting the default button that all warfare is moving in a cyber direction.
Issue: Is Nuclear War More Likely in the Next Decade?
Yes: John F. Harris and Bryan Bender, from "Bill Perry Is Terrified. Why
Aren't You?" Politico Magazine (2017)
No: Stephen M. Walt, from "The World Doesn't Need Any More Nuclear
Strategies," Foreign Policy (2018)
The authors, both writers at Politico, through working with former
Secretary of Defense Bill Perry paint a pessimistic picture of the
likelihood of a nuclear war in the coming years due to issues such as
nuclear proliferation, great power rivalry and increasing tensions among
key global actors. Stephen Walt, Harvard professor at the JFK School of
Government, articulates a nuanced critique of nuclear politics but still
maintains that the use of the nuclear deterrent has and will continue to
make nuclear war less likely over time despite changes dimensions in the
current global landscape.
Unit 1: Global Population and Resources
Issue: Is Global Aging a Major Problem?
Yes: Richard Jackson, from "Global Aging and the Outlook for Growth and
Stability in the Developing World," Global Aging Institute (2017)
No: Maurizio Bussolo, Johannes Koettl, and Emily Sinnott, from "Golden
Aging: Prospects for Healthy, Active, and Prosperous Aging in Europe and
Central Asia," World Bank Group (2015)
Richard Jackson, president of the Global Aging Institute (GAI) and formerly
of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, argues that
demographic trends have affected "the great upheavals of history" from time
to time. He points to the upcoming 2020s as a watershed decade when
widespread disruptions are likely again to occur. For Jackson, during this
next decade, global aging is likely to have a major negative effect on
"economic growth, social and political stability, and the shape of the
world order." The World Bank study authors call into question the old adage
that demographic trends such as global aging, once put into motion, cannot
be stopped and typically lead to increased economic costs. They suggest,
for example, that aging societies "are not destined to experience
stagnation or decline in living standards." They argue instead that aging
"creates many opportunities, including opportunities to increase labor
productivity and the quality of education."
Issue: Will the World Be Able to Feed Itself in the Foreseeable Future?
Yes: Shenggen Fan, from "Progress, Uncertainty and Rising Antiglobalism,"
2018 Global Food Policy Report, International Food Policy Research
Institute (2018)
No: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, IFAD, UNICEF,
WFP and WHO, from "2017: The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the
World: Building Resilience for Peace and Food Security," Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2017)
Shenggen Fan, director general of the International Food Policy Research
Institute, presents a generally positive outlook on the ability of the
global food system to provide sufficient food for the world's population
despite a number of non-food related intrusions that negatively affect the
global capacity of the world's food system. The UN Food and Agriculture
Organization report, on the other hand, looks to an increase in the world's
chronically undernourished people, from an estimated 717 million in 2015 to
815 million in 2017, as a barometer for revealing a worsening situation, in
particular in parts of sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and West Asia.
Given the prevalence of conflict throughout the globe and the increase in
climate-related shocks to the food system, two major deterrents to food
security, the authors' despair of providing adequate food for all without
"renewed efforts through new ways of thinking."
Issue: Can the Global Community Successfully Confront the Global Water
Shortage?
Yes: "The United Nations World Water Development Report 2018: Nature-Based
Solutions for Water," United Nations World Assessment Programme (2018)
No: Lisa Guppy and Kelsey Anderson, from "Global Water Crisis: The Facts,"
United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment, and Health
(2017)
The report suggests that "solutions may be closer than we think" to solving
the problem of more than 2 billion people lacking access to safe drinking
water and more than double that amount having no access to safe sanitation.
The key, according to the Report, is to use nature to create a
cost-effective way to address these problems while also providing
"environmental, social, and economic benefits." The authors point out that
water has been a pressing concern and in some areas of the world, a
"critical national concern." They argue that business as usual will result
in the failure of the international community to address goals created by
international bodies regarding adequate water supplies. The report examines
the water crisis from six inter-related contexts "water scarcity and
insecurity; water-related disasters; water, sanitation, and health crisis;
water infrastructure deterioration and destruction; unsustainable
development; and ecosystem degradation."
Issue: Is the Global Oil Crisis of the Last Half-century Over?
Yes: "World Energy Outlook 2017," International Energy Agency (2017)
No: Chris Martenson, from "The Looming Energy Shock: The Next Oil Crisis
Will Arrive in 3 years or Less," PeakProsperity.com (2017)
In this current review of the world's energy outlook, the International
Energy Agency, an autonomous UN agency established in 1974, surveys the
current global energy system. The report points to four "large-scale
shifts" in the system: "the rapid deployment and falling costs of clean
energy technologies . . . the growing electrification of energy ... the
shift to a more service-oriented economy and a cleaner energy mix in China
... and the resilience of shale gas and tight oil in the United States."
The Report concludes that these are good signs for the world's attempts to
address non-renewable energy resources such as oil. Chris Martenson, a
fellow at the Post Carbon Institute, presents a forceful argument that
within a couple of years, either the world economy will outgrow the supply
of oil or the economy will collapse, both undesirable outcomes.
Issue: Is the Paris Climate Change Agreement Working?
Yes: Todd Stern, from "Why the Paris Agreement Works," The Brookings
Institution (2017)
No: Kelly Levin and Taryn Fransen, from "Understanding the 'Emissions Gap'
in 5 Charts," World Resources Institute (2017)
Todd Stern, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, suggests that the
negotiated agreement had to clear eight distinct hurdles. He argues that
the final agreement was successful in overcoming all of them and provides
arguments for his position. He concludes that, unlike all attempts in the
previous 20 years, this agreement breaks new ground that "needs to be
defended, supported and implemented." His bottom line is that the agreement
is working. The World Resources Institute report co-authored by Senior
Associate Kelly Levin and Senior Fellow Taryn Fransen uses five charts to
explain the "emissions gap,' the "difference between the emissions level
countries have pledged to achieve ... and the level consistent with
limiting warming to well below 2 degrees."
Unit 2: Expanding Global Forces and Movements
Issue: Will The International Community Be Able To Successfully Address The
Next Global Pandemic?
Yes: Arthur G. Fitzmaurice, et al., from "Contributions of the US Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention in Implementing the Global Health
Security Agenda in 17 Partner Countries," Emerging Infectious Diseases
(2017)
No: Meera Senthilingam, from "Seven Reasons We're at More Risk than Ever of
a Global Pandemic," CNN (2017)
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention article describes the
efforts of the Global Health Security Agenda, a partnership among a variety
of national governments and both international governmental and
non-governmental organizations to increase the capacities of countries to
respond to infectious disease pandemics around the globe. Launched in 2014,
the partnership has made significant progress in helping 17 countries
achieve a list of stated objectives. Meera Senthilingam, Editor for CNN
Health and Wellness, points to the view of public health experts that the
world is at a greater risk than ever before in history of a global pandemic
along the magnitude of SARS, swine flu, Ebola, and Zika. Seven major global
trends, the author suggests, contribute to the increased likelihood and
magnitude of such pandemics.
Issue: Do Adequate Strategies Exist to Combat Human Trafficking?
Yes: Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, from "Meeting the
Global Challenge: Effective Strategies to Prevent Human Trafficking,"
Trafficking in Persons Report 2016, U.S. Department of State (2016)
No: United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), from "Global Report
on Trafficking in Persons 2016," Austria: United Nations (2016)
The U.S. Department of State Report describes its two decades effort to
combat human trafficking, focusing on the three Ps-prosecution, protection,
and protection. While the report discusses challenges to the State
Department's efforts, it focuses on success stories and examples in the
fight against human trafficking. The 2016 United Nations Office on Drugs
and Crime report spells out the magnitude of the problem with the
compilation of major data collected about human trafficking. The most
worrisome development since the previous report is the increase in the
movement of refugees and migrants.
Issue: Is Saudi Arabia Moving toward Increased Democratization and/or
Liberalization?
Yes: Thomas L. Friedman, from "Saudi Arabia's Arab Spring, At Last," The
New York Times (2017)
No: "Freedom in the World 2018: Democracy in Crisis," Freedom House (2018)
Thomas L. Friedman, a long-time analyst of the Middle East, argues that the
most significant reforms taking place in the regi on today are in Saudi
Arabia, mainly due to the efforts of the young, controversial Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman. Friedman travels to the Kingdom to interview the Crown
Prince and Saudi citizens about these religious and economic reforms. He
comes away from these conversations convinced the country is moving in a
more liberal, open direction. Freedom House is a U.S. government-funded
non-governmental organization that annually assesses a country's degree of
political freedoms and civil liberties. It relies on a large number of
reputable analysts and academic advisors, and subjects its methodology to
public examination by experts. Its most recent analysis for Saudi Arabia
concludes that the country's status is "Not Free" and documented examples
of crackdowns on reform advocates.
Issue: Is Artificial Intelligence a Threat to Humanity?
Yes: Tim Adams, from "Artificial Intelligence: 'We're like Children Playing
with a Bomb,' " The Guardian (2016)
No: Max Tegmark, from "Benefits and Risks of Artificial Intelligence,"
Future of Life Institute (2018)
Tim Adams, in relaying the thoughts of Oxford philosopher Nick Bostrom,
contends that AI represents an existential threat to humanity because AI
will develop the ability to replicate its intelligence and learn at a much
faster rate than humans. Max Tegmark, an MIT professor, contends that AI
can and will be a great boon for humanity and will be shaped by its ability
to problem solve and not by some myth regarding its own capacity to "turn
on" humanity at some point.
Issue: Is the West Losing the Global Information War?
Yes: Alina Polyakova and Spencer P. Boyer, from "The Future of Political
Warfare: Russia, the West, and the Coming Age of Global Digital
Competition," The New Geopolitics (2018)
No: Molly C. McKew, from "Putin's Real Long Game," Politico Magazine (2017)
The authors, both from The Brookings Institution, contend that we are at
the nexus of technology, big data and AI such that states and other
entities can now engage in political warfare without great consequences and
at low cost. They argue that this is exactly what Russia is engaged in
right now throughout Europe and the United States. The author, a former
advisor to the president of the country of Georgia, argues that the Russian
strategy is to so undermine truth and reality in the West so that basic
institutions and social order breaks down. The author articulates ways that
the West can thwart such actions and win.
Issue: Is Authoritarianism on the Rise or Will Democracy Endure?
Yes: Suzanne Sataline, from "Democracy Under Stress: Is Representative
Government in Retreat Worldwide?" CQ Researcher (2017)
No: Kurt Weyland and Raúl L. Madrid, from "Liberal Democracy Is Stronger
Than Trump's Populism," The American Interest (2017)
Suzanne Sataline, a writer based in Hong Kong, contends that if one looks
at the past 100 years of development, democracy is clearly in retreat and
under attack from a variety of social/political and technological forces.
Kurt Weyland and Raúl Madrid, both University of Texas professors, use the
growth populism in the West as represented by the election of Donald Trump
to argue that democracy is resilient, still strong and capable of thwarting
any permanent growth of authoritarianism.
Issue: Is the Power of Social Media Undermining Democracy?
Yes: Erica Chenoweth, from "How Social Media Helps Dictators," Foreign
Policy (2016)
No: Helen Margetts, from "Of Course Social Media Is Transforming Politics.
But It's Not to Blame for Brexit and Trump," World Economic Forum (2016)
Erica Chenoweth, University of Denver professor, contends that social media
has been hijacked in part by authoritarian and antidemocratic forces to sew
doubt and undermine democratic institutions around the globe. Helen
Margetts, professor at the Oxford Internet Institute of the University of
Oxford, argues that social media has been used for all kinds of reasons
both democratic, social justice and authoritarian but sounding the alarm
that it is now a force for anti-demotic impulses is overtaking its role and
missing the larger context.
Unit 3: The New Global Security Agenda
Issue: Were Efforts to Withdraw the United States from the Iran Nuclear
Agreement Misguided?
Yes: Philip Gordon and Richard Nephew, from "The 'Worst Deal Ever' That
Actually Wasn't," The Atlantic (2017)
No: "Remarks by President Trump on the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action,"
The White House (2018)
The authors, both policymakers who were part of the team that negotiated
the Iran nuclear deal, argue it is doing what it was supposed to do:
prevent Iran from acquiring enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon,
demonstrate to the Iranian public the benefits of cooperation with the
international community, and buy time for potential changes in Iranian
politics and foreign policy ¿ and therefore, efforts to walk away from the
agreement are misguided. In announcing that the United States was leaving
the Iran nuclear agreement, President Trump argued that the deal "allowed
Iran to continue enriching uranium and, over time, reach the brink of a
nuclear break¬out." He further stated that Iran's claim it desired a
peaceful nuclear program "was a lie." Furthermore, the President also
suggested that the deal failed to address Iran's development of ballistic
missiles and provides "inadequate mechanisms to prevent, detect, and punish
cheating . . . ."
Issue: Has the Assad Regime Won the Syrian Civil War?
Yes: Daniel R. DePetris, from "How Bashar al-Assad Won the War in Syria,"
The National Interest (2017)
No: Krishnadev Calamur, from "No One Is Winning the Syrian Civil War," The
Atlantic (2018)
Daniel R. DePetris, an analyst at Wikistrat, Inc., suggests that early in
the Syrian conflict it appeared that Assad was on his way out. But five
years later everything had been turned around and the world came to
understand "how wily, clever, and street-smart" the government had been all
along, leaving Assad in power with the help of Russian and Iranian support.
Krishnadev Calamur, a senior editor at The Atlantic, argues that President
Assad and his regime have not won the war. It is more accurate to say that
Russian, Iranian, and Kurdish forces have emerged as the victors. He writes
that Assad would not be able to survive in power on his own, without
Russian and Iranian support. And, while Assad's goal is to regain control
of the entire country, Syria as a unified nation has effectively collapsed.
Issue: Is a Two-state Diplomatic Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
Conflict Possible or Likely in the Near Future?
Yes: Mara Rudman and Brian Katulis, from "A Practical Plan on the
Israeli-Palestinian Front," Center for American Progress (2016)
No: Nickolay Mladenov, from "Security Council Briefing on the Situation in
the Middle East," UNESCO (2018)
The Center for American Progress study, authored by two experienced
government analysts who served under Democratic administrations, suggests
six building blocks for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
problem. The study's authors, respected scholars of Middle East affairs,
argue that despite a number of factors making a solution more difficult,
progress toward a two-state solution can be made if attention is paid to
these building blocks. Nicolay Mladenov, the UN Special Coordinator for the
Middle East Peace Process, suggests that it is a grim time for those
seeking peace in the Middle East. For him, "much of the Middle East
continues to be in the grips of an ongoing human tragedy of immense
proportions." He argues that those opposed to peace are gaining confidence
with each passing day, and they are hindering progress by pushing
unilateral facts on the ground that are "blocking the pathway back to the
negotiating table."
Issue: Is Russia Increasingly Pursuing a Strategy to Threaten Democratic
Regimes Throughout Europe and the Western World?
Yes: Larry Diamond, from "Russia and the Threat to Liberal Democracy," The
Atlantic (2016)
No: Mark Lawrence Schrad, from "Vladimir Putin Isn't a Supervillain,"
Foreign Policy (2017)
Larry Diamond, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and at the Freeman
Spogli Institute at Stanford University, argues that Putin "has embraced an
opportunistic but sophisticated campaign to sabotage democracy." For
Diamond, of greatest danger is the "alarming decay of liberal democracy in
Europe and the United States." Mark Lawrence Schrad, a Villanova University
professor, suggests that Western commentary on Russia's foreign policy can
be placed into two rather extreme camps. One approach calls Putin a global
menace while the other sees a country falling apart. Schrad argues that the
reality is somewhere in between. "Russia is not nearly the global menace
that many fear, nor is it doomed to collapse." Accordingly, he believes
that any analysis must be a "sober assessment of the country's capabilities
and limitations."
Issue: Will China Be the Next Global Superpower?
Yes: Kenneth Rapoza, from "The Future: China's Rise, America's Decline,"
Forbes (2017)
No: Alan Dupont, from "Will China Rule the World? Asian Superpower Faces
Uncertain Future," The Australian (2016)
Forbes writer Kenneth Rapoza argues that most economic and social
indicators point to both a steady rise for China and a decline for the
United States. When the crossover point occurs will be is anyone's guess.
Dupont contends that despite China's enormous gifs and potential, it still
faces great obstacles in its quest to move from regional dominance to true
superpower status.
Issue: Can Diplomacy, Rather than Military Action, Result in North Korea
Denuclearizing?
Yes: Uri Friedman, from "Here's What Trump Actually Achieved with North
Korea," The Atlantic (2018)
No: Brian Barrett, from "All the Times North Korea Promised to
Denuclearize," WIRED (2018)
Uri Freidman, global affairs staff writer at The Atlantic, argues a case
can be made that diplomacy might finally work this time in getting North
Korea to denuclearize after the latest round of negotiations at the leader
level. Among the author's six reasons for optimism is the fact that the two
countries are talking to each other at a political decision-maker
level-putting the politics first and at a very high level-and that any
North Korean denuclearization pledge such as this latest one is
significant. Brian Barrett, News Editor at WIRED, is not hopeful,
suggesting that this is simply another example of the pattern where North
Korea promises to "abandon nuclear efforts" with "surprising regularity"
and then does not follow through on its promises. He argues that North
Korea uses the promise of denuclearization as a "bargaining chip in times
of desperation" and details the multiple rounds of negotiations over the
past several decades that have all ended in failure.
Issue: Is Cyberwar the Future of 21st-Century Conflict?
Yes: Rick Stella, from "From Cyberwarfare to Drones, the Future of Conflict
Is Electronic," Digital Trends (2016)
No: Daniel Moore, from "Struggling with Cyber: A Critical Look at Waging
War Online," War on the Rocks (2017)
Rick Stella, Outdoor Editor of Digital Trends, makes the argument that in
the aftermath of 9/11, innovation and technology in warfare became of
paramount importance. As a result, cyber warfare has become the dominant
trend in weapons research, development and ultimately application. Daniel
Moore, a threat intelligence engineer, makes that case that it is too easy
to simply argue that if technology is sophisticated, then it means that all
warfare will be cyber. He maintains that one must define one's terms before
hitting the default button that all warfare is moving in a cyber direction.
Issue: Is Nuclear War More Likely in the Next Decade?
Yes: John F. Harris and Bryan Bender, from "Bill Perry Is Terrified. Why
Aren't You?" Politico Magazine (2017)
No: Stephen M. Walt, from "The World Doesn't Need Any More Nuclear
Strategies," Foreign Policy (2018)
The authors, both writers at Politico, through working with former
Secretary of Defense Bill Perry paint a pessimistic picture of the
likelihood of a nuclear war in the coming years due to issues such as
nuclear proliferation, great power rivalry and increasing tensions among
key global actors. Stephen Walt, Harvard professor at the JFK School of
Government, articulates a nuanced critique of nuclear politics but still
maintains that the use of the nuclear deterrent has and will continue to
make nuclear war less likely over time despite changes dimensions in the
current global landscape.
Issue: Is Global Aging a Major Problem?
Yes: Richard Jackson, from "Global Aging and the Outlook for Growth and
Stability in the Developing World," Global Aging Institute (2017)
No: Maurizio Bussolo, Johannes Koettl, and Emily Sinnott, from "Golden
Aging: Prospects for Healthy, Active, and Prosperous Aging in Europe and
Central Asia," World Bank Group (2015)
Richard Jackson, president of the Global Aging Institute (GAI) and formerly
of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, argues that
demographic trends have affected "the great upheavals of history" from time
to time. He points to the upcoming 2020s as a watershed decade when
widespread disruptions are likely again to occur. For Jackson, during this
next decade, global aging is likely to have a major negative effect on
"economic growth, social and political stability, and the shape of the
world order." The World Bank study authors call into question the old adage
that demographic trends such as global aging, once put into motion, cannot
be stopped and typically lead to increased economic costs. They suggest,
for example, that aging societies "are not destined to experience
stagnation or decline in living standards." They argue instead that aging
"creates many opportunities, including opportunities to increase labor
productivity and the quality of education."
Issue: Will the World Be Able to Feed Itself in the Foreseeable Future?
Yes: Shenggen Fan, from "Progress, Uncertainty and Rising Antiglobalism,"
2018 Global Food Policy Report, International Food Policy Research
Institute (2018)
No: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, IFAD, UNICEF,
WFP and WHO, from "2017: The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the
World: Building Resilience for Peace and Food Security," Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2017)
Shenggen Fan, director general of the International Food Policy Research
Institute, presents a generally positive outlook on the ability of the
global food system to provide sufficient food for the world's population
despite a number of non-food related intrusions that negatively affect the
global capacity of the world's food system. The UN Food and Agriculture
Organization report, on the other hand, looks to an increase in the world's
chronically undernourished people, from an estimated 717 million in 2015 to
815 million in 2017, as a barometer for revealing a worsening situation, in
particular in parts of sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and West Asia.
Given the prevalence of conflict throughout the globe and the increase in
climate-related shocks to the food system, two major deterrents to food
security, the authors' despair of providing adequate food for all without
"renewed efforts through new ways of thinking."
Issue: Can the Global Community Successfully Confront the Global Water
Shortage?
Yes: "The United Nations World Water Development Report 2018: Nature-Based
Solutions for Water," United Nations World Assessment Programme (2018)
No: Lisa Guppy and Kelsey Anderson, from "Global Water Crisis: The Facts,"
United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment, and Health
(2017)
The report suggests that "solutions may be closer than we think" to solving
the problem of more than 2 billion people lacking access to safe drinking
water and more than double that amount having no access to safe sanitation.
The key, according to the Report, is to use nature to create a
cost-effective way to address these problems while also providing
"environmental, social, and economic benefits." The authors point out that
water has been a pressing concern and in some areas of the world, a
"critical national concern." They argue that business as usual will result
in the failure of the international community to address goals created by
international bodies regarding adequate water supplies. The report examines
the water crisis from six inter-related contexts "water scarcity and
insecurity; water-related disasters; water, sanitation, and health crisis;
water infrastructure deterioration and destruction; unsustainable
development; and ecosystem degradation."
Issue: Is the Global Oil Crisis of the Last Half-century Over?
Yes: "World Energy Outlook 2017," International Energy Agency (2017)
No: Chris Martenson, from "The Looming Energy Shock: The Next Oil Crisis
Will Arrive in 3 years or Less," PeakProsperity.com (2017)
In this current review of the world's energy outlook, the International
Energy Agency, an autonomous UN agency established in 1974, surveys the
current global energy system. The report points to four "large-scale
shifts" in the system: "the rapid deployment and falling costs of clean
energy technologies . . . the growing electrification of energy ... the
shift to a more service-oriented economy and a cleaner energy mix in China
... and the resilience of shale gas and tight oil in the United States."
The Report concludes that these are good signs for the world's attempts to
address non-renewable energy resources such as oil. Chris Martenson, a
fellow at the Post Carbon Institute, presents a forceful argument that
within a couple of years, either the world economy will outgrow the supply
of oil or the economy will collapse, both undesirable outcomes.
Issue: Is the Paris Climate Change Agreement Working?
Yes: Todd Stern, from "Why the Paris Agreement Works," The Brookings
Institution (2017)
No: Kelly Levin and Taryn Fransen, from "Understanding the 'Emissions Gap'
in 5 Charts," World Resources Institute (2017)
Todd Stern, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, suggests that the
negotiated agreement had to clear eight distinct hurdles. He argues that
the final agreement was successful in overcoming all of them and provides
arguments for his position. He concludes that, unlike all attempts in the
previous 20 years, this agreement breaks new ground that "needs to be
defended, supported and implemented." His bottom line is that the agreement
is working. The World Resources Institute report co-authored by Senior
Associate Kelly Levin and Senior Fellow Taryn Fransen uses five charts to
explain the "emissions gap,' the "difference between the emissions level
countries have pledged to achieve ... and the level consistent with
limiting warming to well below 2 degrees."
Unit 2: Expanding Global Forces and Movements
Issue: Will The International Community Be Able To Successfully Address The
Next Global Pandemic?
Yes: Arthur G. Fitzmaurice, et al., from "Contributions of the US Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention in Implementing the Global Health
Security Agenda in 17 Partner Countries," Emerging Infectious Diseases
(2017)
No: Meera Senthilingam, from "Seven Reasons We're at More Risk than Ever of
a Global Pandemic," CNN (2017)
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention article describes the
efforts of the Global Health Security Agenda, a partnership among a variety
of national governments and both international governmental and
non-governmental organizations to increase the capacities of countries to
respond to infectious disease pandemics around the globe. Launched in 2014,
the partnership has made significant progress in helping 17 countries
achieve a list of stated objectives. Meera Senthilingam, Editor for CNN
Health and Wellness, points to the view of public health experts that the
world is at a greater risk than ever before in history of a global pandemic
along the magnitude of SARS, swine flu, Ebola, and Zika. Seven major global
trends, the author suggests, contribute to the increased likelihood and
magnitude of such pandemics.
Issue: Do Adequate Strategies Exist to Combat Human Trafficking?
Yes: Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, from "Meeting the
Global Challenge: Effective Strategies to Prevent Human Trafficking,"
Trafficking in Persons Report 2016, U.S. Department of State (2016)
No: United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), from "Global Report
on Trafficking in Persons 2016," Austria: United Nations (2016)
The U.S. Department of State Report describes its two decades effort to
combat human trafficking, focusing on the three Ps-prosecution, protection,
and protection. While the report discusses challenges to the State
Department's efforts, it focuses on success stories and examples in the
fight against human trafficking. The 2016 United Nations Office on Drugs
and Crime report spells out the magnitude of the problem with the
compilation of major data collected about human trafficking. The most
worrisome development since the previous report is the increase in the
movement of refugees and migrants.
Issue: Is Saudi Arabia Moving toward Increased Democratization and/or
Liberalization?
Yes: Thomas L. Friedman, from "Saudi Arabia's Arab Spring, At Last," The
New York Times (2017)
No: "Freedom in the World 2018: Democracy in Crisis," Freedom House (2018)
Thomas L. Friedman, a long-time analyst of the Middle East, argues that the
most significant reforms taking place in the regi on today are in Saudi
Arabia, mainly due to the efforts of the young, controversial Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman. Friedman travels to the Kingdom to interview the Crown
Prince and Saudi citizens about these religious and economic reforms. He
comes away from these conversations convinced the country is moving in a
more liberal, open direction. Freedom House is a U.S. government-funded
non-governmental organization that annually assesses a country's degree of
political freedoms and civil liberties. It relies on a large number of
reputable analysts and academic advisors, and subjects its methodology to
public examination by experts. Its most recent analysis for Saudi Arabia
concludes that the country's status is "Not Free" and documented examples
of crackdowns on reform advocates.
Issue: Is Artificial Intelligence a Threat to Humanity?
Yes: Tim Adams, from "Artificial Intelligence: 'We're like Children Playing
with a Bomb,' " The Guardian (2016)
No: Max Tegmark, from "Benefits and Risks of Artificial Intelligence,"
Future of Life Institute (2018)
Tim Adams, in relaying the thoughts of Oxford philosopher Nick Bostrom,
contends that AI represents an existential threat to humanity because AI
will develop the ability to replicate its intelligence and learn at a much
faster rate than humans. Max Tegmark, an MIT professor, contends that AI
can and will be a great boon for humanity and will be shaped by its ability
to problem solve and not by some myth regarding its own capacity to "turn
on" humanity at some point.
Issue: Is the West Losing the Global Information War?
Yes: Alina Polyakova and Spencer P. Boyer, from "The Future of Political
Warfare: Russia, the West, and the Coming Age of Global Digital
Competition," The New Geopolitics (2018)
No: Molly C. McKew, from "Putin's Real Long Game," Politico Magazine (2017)
The authors, both from The Brookings Institution, contend that we are at
the nexus of technology, big data and AI such that states and other
entities can now engage in political warfare without great consequences and
at low cost. They argue that this is exactly what Russia is engaged in
right now throughout Europe and the United States. The author, a former
advisor to the president of the country of Georgia, argues that the Russian
strategy is to so undermine truth and reality in the West so that basic
institutions and social order breaks down. The author articulates ways that
the West can thwart such actions and win.
Issue: Is Authoritarianism on the Rise or Will Democracy Endure?
Yes: Suzanne Sataline, from "Democracy Under Stress: Is Representative
Government in Retreat Worldwide?" CQ Researcher (2017)
No: Kurt Weyland and Raúl L. Madrid, from "Liberal Democracy Is Stronger
Than Trump's Populism," The American Interest (2017)
Suzanne Sataline, a writer based in Hong Kong, contends that if one looks
at the past 100 years of development, democracy is clearly in retreat and
under attack from a variety of social/political and technological forces.
Kurt Weyland and Raúl Madrid, both University of Texas professors, use the
growth populism in the West as represented by the election of Donald Trump
to argue that democracy is resilient, still strong and capable of thwarting
any permanent growth of authoritarianism.
Issue: Is the Power of Social Media Undermining Democracy?
Yes: Erica Chenoweth, from "How Social Media Helps Dictators," Foreign
Policy (2016)
No: Helen Margetts, from "Of Course Social Media Is Transforming Politics.
But It's Not to Blame for Brexit and Trump," World Economic Forum (2016)
Erica Chenoweth, University of Denver professor, contends that social media
has been hijacked in part by authoritarian and antidemocratic forces to sew
doubt and undermine democratic institutions around the globe. Helen
Margetts, professor at the Oxford Internet Institute of the University of
Oxford, argues that social media has been used for all kinds of reasons
both democratic, social justice and authoritarian but sounding the alarm
that it is now a force for anti-demotic impulses is overtaking its role and
missing the larger context.
Unit 3: The New Global Security Agenda
Issue: Were Efforts to Withdraw the United States from the Iran Nuclear
Agreement Misguided?
Yes: Philip Gordon and Richard Nephew, from "The 'Worst Deal Ever' That
Actually Wasn't," The Atlantic (2017)
No: "Remarks by President Trump on the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action,"
The White House (2018)
The authors, both policymakers who were part of the team that negotiated
the Iran nuclear deal, argue it is doing what it was supposed to do:
prevent Iran from acquiring enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon,
demonstrate to the Iranian public the benefits of cooperation with the
international community, and buy time for potential changes in Iranian
politics and foreign policy ¿ and therefore, efforts to walk away from the
agreement are misguided. In announcing that the United States was leaving
the Iran nuclear agreement, President Trump argued that the deal "allowed
Iran to continue enriching uranium and, over time, reach the brink of a
nuclear break¬out." He further stated that Iran's claim it desired a
peaceful nuclear program "was a lie." Furthermore, the President also
suggested that the deal failed to address Iran's development of ballistic
missiles and provides "inadequate mechanisms to prevent, detect, and punish
cheating . . . ."
Issue: Has the Assad Regime Won the Syrian Civil War?
Yes: Daniel R. DePetris, from "How Bashar al-Assad Won the War in Syria,"
The National Interest (2017)
No: Krishnadev Calamur, from "No One Is Winning the Syrian Civil War," The
Atlantic (2018)
Daniel R. DePetris, an analyst at Wikistrat, Inc., suggests that early in
the Syrian conflict it appeared that Assad was on his way out. But five
years later everything had been turned around and the world came to
understand "how wily, clever, and street-smart" the government had been all
along, leaving Assad in power with the help of Russian and Iranian support.
Krishnadev Calamur, a senior editor at The Atlantic, argues that President
Assad and his regime have not won the war. It is more accurate to say that
Russian, Iranian, and Kurdish forces have emerged as the victors. He writes
that Assad would not be able to survive in power on his own, without
Russian and Iranian support. And, while Assad's goal is to regain control
of the entire country, Syria as a unified nation has effectively collapsed.
Issue: Is a Two-state Diplomatic Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
Conflict Possible or Likely in the Near Future?
Yes: Mara Rudman and Brian Katulis, from "A Practical Plan on the
Israeli-Palestinian Front," Center for American Progress (2016)
No: Nickolay Mladenov, from "Security Council Briefing on the Situation in
the Middle East," UNESCO (2018)
The Center for American Progress study, authored by two experienced
government analysts who served under Democratic administrations, suggests
six building blocks for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
problem. The study's authors, respected scholars of Middle East affairs,
argue that despite a number of factors making a solution more difficult,
progress toward a two-state solution can be made if attention is paid to
these building blocks. Nicolay Mladenov, the UN Special Coordinator for the
Middle East Peace Process, suggests that it is a grim time for those
seeking peace in the Middle East. For him, "much of the Middle East
continues to be in the grips of an ongoing human tragedy of immense
proportions." He argues that those opposed to peace are gaining confidence
with each passing day, and they are hindering progress by pushing
unilateral facts on the ground that are "blocking the pathway back to the
negotiating table."
Issue: Is Russia Increasingly Pursuing a Strategy to Threaten Democratic
Regimes Throughout Europe and the Western World?
Yes: Larry Diamond, from "Russia and the Threat to Liberal Democracy," The
Atlantic (2016)
No: Mark Lawrence Schrad, from "Vladimir Putin Isn't a Supervillain,"
Foreign Policy (2017)
Larry Diamond, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and at the Freeman
Spogli Institute at Stanford University, argues that Putin "has embraced an
opportunistic but sophisticated campaign to sabotage democracy." For
Diamond, of greatest danger is the "alarming decay of liberal democracy in
Europe and the United States." Mark Lawrence Schrad, a Villanova University
professor, suggests that Western commentary on Russia's foreign policy can
be placed into two rather extreme camps. One approach calls Putin a global
menace while the other sees a country falling apart. Schrad argues that the
reality is somewhere in between. "Russia is not nearly the global menace
that many fear, nor is it doomed to collapse." Accordingly, he believes
that any analysis must be a "sober assessment of the country's capabilities
and limitations."
Issue: Will China Be the Next Global Superpower?
Yes: Kenneth Rapoza, from "The Future: China's Rise, America's Decline,"
Forbes (2017)
No: Alan Dupont, from "Will China Rule the World? Asian Superpower Faces
Uncertain Future," The Australian (2016)
Forbes writer Kenneth Rapoza argues that most economic and social
indicators point to both a steady rise for China and a decline for the
United States. When the crossover point occurs will be is anyone's guess.
Dupont contends that despite China's enormous gifs and potential, it still
faces great obstacles in its quest to move from regional dominance to true
superpower status.
Issue: Can Diplomacy, Rather than Military Action, Result in North Korea
Denuclearizing?
Yes: Uri Friedman, from "Here's What Trump Actually Achieved with North
Korea," The Atlantic (2018)
No: Brian Barrett, from "All the Times North Korea Promised to
Denuclearize," WIRED (2018)
Uri Freidman, global affairs staff writer at The Atlantic, argues a case
can be made that diplomacy might finally work this time in getting North
Korea to denuclearize after the latest round of negotiations at the leader
level. Among the author's six reasons for optimism is the fact that the two
countries are talking to each other at a political decision-maker
level-putting the politics first and at a very high level-and that any
North Korean denuclearization pledge such as this latest one is
significant. Brian Barrett, News Editor at WIRED, is not hopeful,
suggesting that this is simply another example of the pattern where North
Korea promises to "abandon nuclear efforts" with "surprising regularity"
and then does not follow through on its promises. He argues that North
Korea uses the promise of denuclearization as a "bargaining chip in times
of desperation" and details the multiple rounds of negotiations over the
past several decades that have all ended in failure.
Issue: Is Cyberwar the Future of 21st-Century Conflict?
Yes: Rick Stella, from "From Cyberwarfare to Drones, the Future of Conflict
Is Electronic," Digital Trends (2016)
No: Daniel Moore, from "Struggling with Cyber: A Critical Look at Waging
War Online," War on the Rocks (2017)
Rick Stella, Outdoor Editor of Digital Trends, makes the argument that in
the aftermath of 9/11, innovation and technology in warfare became of
paramount importance. As a result, cyber warfare has become the dominant
trend in weapons research, development and ultimately application. Daniel
Moore, a threat intelligence engineer, makes that case that it is too easy
to simply argue that if technology is sophisticated, then it means that all
warfare will be cyber. He maintains that one must define one's terms before
hitting the default button that all warfare is moving in a cyber direction.
Issue: Is Nuclear War More Likely in the Next Decade?
Yes: John F. Harris and Bryan Bender, from "Bill Perry Is Terrified. Why
Aren't You?" Politico Magazine (2017)
No: Stephen M. Walt, from "The World Doesn't Need Any More Nuclear
Strategies," Foreign Policy (2018)
The authors, both writers at Politico, through working with former
Secretary of Defense Bill Perry paint a pessimistic picture of the
likelihood of a nuclear war in the coming years due to issues such as
nuclear proliferation, great power rivalry and increasing tensions among
key global actors. Stephen Walt, Harvard professor at the JFK School of
Government, articulates a nuanced critique of nuclear politics but still
maintains that the use of the nuclear deterrent has and will continue to
make nuclear war less likely over time despite changes dimensions in the
current global landscape.