The Doha Round negotiations underway in the World Trade Organization (WTO) are poised at a crucial stage. Members resumed meetings in November 2006 with a view to breaking the impasse in the ...
In recent years, China-Europe relations have undergone significant changes. While the two sides have differences over issues like trade and human rights, they share common interests in addressing ...
The Security Studies Program analyzes issues concerning India’s foreign and defense policies with a special emphasis on India’s relationship with China. It also traces developments along India’s ...
Late last year, the Economist asked an intriguing question: How scary is China? President Joe Biden’s administration clearly considers China a peer competitor to the United States and many in Congress ...
The Asia Program in Washington studies disruptive security, governance, and technological risks that threaten peace, growth, and opportunity in the Asia-Pacific region, including a focus on China, ...
With Russia using North Korean ballistic missiles on the battlefield in Ukraine, Kim Jong Un denouncing his father’s and grandfather’s stance on Korean unification, and borders beginning to reopen to ...
The Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program explores how climate change and the responses to it are changing international politics, global governance, and world security. Our work covers ...
Carnegie’s Political Economy Initiative features ongoing efforts to help policymakers better understand these dynamics, as well as the ways in which foreign policy tools, economic statecraft, and ...
George Mitchell is the “personification of an honest broker,” and his appointment as U.S. Mideast envoy raised hopes in Arab capitals that the United States is rededicated to its role as a balanced ...
The ongoing instability in the Middle East region has empowered a major shift in the paradigm of jihadist security threats. Previously, the primary security threats were seen to be global ...