Can multilateral institutions such as the World Bank adapt to new realities and systemic shocks that have thrown development in reverse?
The rules of global order reveal critical alignments and differences between countries. An international contest to reshape them is intensifying.
The phrase lacks the depth and diversity of the world it purports to describe.
Meet Carnegie nonresident scholar Zachary D. Carter.
To illuminate the shifting diplomatic landscape, fifteen scholars from around the world address whether the UN Security Council can be reformed, and what potential routes might help realize this goal.
Despite complications, the long-debated agreement is grounds for celebration at an otherwise dismal moment in world politics.
Washington has four options for multilateralism: a charter, a club, a concert, or a coalition model. The task is choosing the right approach for the right situation.
Pundits on both ends of the political spectrum have asked the critical question: How does U.S. foreign policy impact the American people?
National sovereignty is here to stay, but a new worldview grounded in ecological realism could help close the distance between the political and natural worlds.
When Russia invaded Ukraine in February, it deployed 160,000 troops. Vladimir Putin has now called up 300,000 after major setbacks in Ukraine, while coupling his announcement with his most overt nuclear threat to the West.