Los Angeles & The United Arab Emirates: City Diplomacy and Climate Sustainability
As climate leaders race to keep global temperatures from rising, what kinds of drastic measures should cities undertake to ensure we are able to avert the cataclysmic effects of climate change?
North Korea's ongoing nuclear missile tests prove it's time to normalize relations
Given the history of repeated dead-end disarmament talks, déjà vu begs the question whether it is time to cut bait and accept the unacceptable writes Bennett Ramberg
Artificial Intelligence and Big Data in the Indo-Pacific
What is the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) and big data on societies in the Indo-Pacific? How are countries using AI and big data to enhance their national security and advance their national interests? And what are the major regulatory issues? For a perspective on these and other matters, Jongsoo Lee interviewed Simon Chesterman
Human Rights in Afghanistan: 4 Reasons Why Taliban Should not be Recognized
In a fast-growing inter-connected world, Afghanistan cannot sustain itself in isolation. To avoid isolation, the country needs a nationally agreed-upon legal framework, writes Abdul Rahman Yasa
Alice C. Hill and her new book, “The Fight for Climate After COVID-19”
In her new book, The Fight for Climate After COVID-19, Pacific Council Member Alice C. Hill helps us understand why the time has come to prepare for the world as it will be, rather than as it once was.
The Hazaras and Human Security in Afghanistan
Only now have Western nations woken up to the continued threat to Afghan minorities and women, writes Ibrahim Al Marashi.
1979 and the Linked fates of Afghanistan and the Middle East
The year 1979 is a turning point in the history of the region, as the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Islamic revolution in Iran and ‘Seige of Mecca’ laid the groundwork for the rise and victory of the Taliban over forty years later, writes Ibrahim Al Marashi
How to beat the coronavirus
The CDC undoubtedly made some messaging and even decision mistakes – ending mask requirements too soon – which didn’t help. The agency is also still recovering from the severe loss of credibility it suffered in the last administration. But maybe, just maybe, sports fans, we haven’t really understood the game we are playing, writes Peter Katona and Seth Freeman.
Depolarizing Destructive Media Discourses in the U.S.
Considering the many destructive consequences of disinformation, we can’t allow ourselves to become ambivalent about the news by assuming none of it is worth consuming simply because it may or may not be trustworthy, writes Kelly Kehoe
EXAMINED: The South China Sea Arbitration Award
Is China a revisionist power challenging the rules-based international order? How are China’s Asian neighbors dealing with China’s rise, including its actions in the South China Sea? For a perspective on these and other matters, Dr. James Jongsoo Lee interviews Jay L. Batongbacal, a professor at the University of the Philippines College of Law and the director of the university’s Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea.
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