
European governments may be breathing more easily this week, as they absorb U.S. President-elect Joe Biden’s victory. But they should beware of wishful thinking about the transatlantic relationship.

As leaders around the world offer congratulations to Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, Carnegie scholars across our global network are looking ahead to what their administration will mean for U.S. engagement with key international partners and competitors.

Spot analysis from Carnegie scholars on events relating to the Middle East and North Africa.

The protest in Russia is becoming increasingly anti-Putin, as the example of Khabarovsk shows. From all flanks, left and right, not specifically liberal.

Leaving the Paris Agreement is the final nail in the coffin of American leadership on climate change. What’s next?

The Biden administration is likely to alter U.S. policy toward the Middle East in three key ways.

While Indian officials are enthusiastic about Biden’s election, many policymakers are wary of protecting the gains they received from Trump.

There are no signs that post-election relations between Russia and the United States will become warmer. The Kremlin is braced for four years of what it expects to be uncertain rule under President-elect Joe Biden.

The country’s leaders are seeking to put an end to the popular protest movement, but it’s just not working.
In an interview for the Institute for Security Studies and Development of North Macedonia (ISSD) Allison Carragher provides the keys to sustained economic development in the Western Balkans.