The CSIS Scholl Chair in International Business analyzes how the U.S. 2024 elections will affect the transatlantic climate ...
The Philippines’ fragile energy outlook threatens to undermine allied efforts to secure its strategic autonomy vis-à-vis an ...
The North Korean Human Rights Act passed twenty years ago in 2004 provided us with useful tools to address the deplorable ...
This edition of the Evening covers Zelensky Victory Plan, NK Support for Russia, Blowin’ in the Wind, and More ...
The United States and China are seemingly backing rival railroads in the quest for critical minerals in southern Africa. CSIS ...
China’s 2005 Anti-Secession Law (ASL) is an important piece of legislation that Beijing invokes to pressure Taiwan and ...
What does having women sitting at international affairs decisionmaking tables actually get us? This Smart Women, Smart Power ...
Please join the CSIS Japan Chair in collaboration with the Sasakawa Peace Foundation (SPF) for a conference on extended deterrence in Asia. This conference will bring together a small group of ...
Join the CSIS Americas Program for a conversation on the geopolitical and security challenges impacting Latin America's ports. Across the Western Hemisphere, ports have appeared as key nodes for ...
Our goal in launching the Economic Security and Technology Department’s Back & Forth series is two-fold. First, we want to bring attention to issues that do not get adequate attention in Washington ...
Semiconductors are a vital and mineral-intensive component in the electronic devices that power the modern economy. Four minerals central to semiconductor production—gallium, germanium, palladium, and ...
This transcript is from a CSIS podcast published on October 15, 2024. Listen to the podcast here. Jon Alterman: Lina Khatib, welcome to Babel. Lina Khatib: Thank you for having me. Jon Alterman: Were ...