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The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace hosted a virtual event on U.S. policy toward China and Russia amid the coronavirus pandemic. Speakers included former State Department and national ...
Eugene Rumer, “The Coronavirus Won't Make Putin Play Nice,” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, April 14, 2020. Wendy Cutler and Danny Russel, “Could the Pandemic Ease U.S.-China ...
International criminals will use this crisis ... be easier during the coronavirus pandemic by Jodi ... the Democracy and Governance Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Introduction The coronavirus pandemic has disrupted hundreds of elections scheduled in 2020. ... a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace recorded 72 anti-government protest movements this year through November — down slightly from the same period in 2020, but significantly higher ...
Connections, Vol. 19, No. 2, The Security Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic (Spring 2020), pp. 89-99 (11 pages) Covid-19 has spared no region of the world's Global South and Global North. For obvious ...
Russian military analyst Michael Kofman joined the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace for a virtual discussion on the current state of the war in Ukraine. He discussed his visit to the ...
As the coronavirus pandemic tears through Latin America and the Caribbean, ... said Thomas Carothers, a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
As the pandemic moves from public health crisis to partisan flashpoint, the debate over the coronavirus response in the U.S. is becoming increasingly nasty – and, in some cases, violent.
The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace is a foreign-policy think tank with centers in Washington, D.C., Moscow, Beirut, Beijing, and Brussels.
COVID-19 threatens not only hard-won development and peacebuilding gains but also “risks exacerbating conflicts or fomenting new ones”, the Secretary-General told the Security Council.