
The arrival of a new European Commission this autumn coincides with a daunting list of internal and external challenges for the European Union.

A discussion of ICT supply chain integrity and complementary measures by governments and ICT suppliers on how to reduce systemic risks, restore confidence in the integrity of ICTs, and forestall fragmentation of the marketplace.

Ever since its first major foray into warfare during World War I, air power has undergone a significant military-technological revolution, with implications for strategic theory.

As President Joko Widodo looks ahead to his second-term inaugural next month, huge challenges lie ahead and some contradictions remain unresolved, including latent social cleavages, the evolving role of Islam in political life, and tough economic choices.

What is increasingly apparent is that the imposition of reciprocal tariffs on goods is a symptom of a larger structural shift in Sino-U.S. relations.

Carnegie India hosted the seventh discussion of the Security Studies Seminar on “Kargil, Ussuri, and the Offense-Defense Balance Under the Nuclear Overhang.”

Mary Robinson, former president of Ireland, and Gro Harlem Brundtland, former prime minister of Norway, will discuss the future of nuclear arms control.

Karen DeYoung will moderate a conversation with Carolyn Forché on her recent memoir and discuss how this history colors the present crisis in Central America.

Tensions between the world’s superpowers are mounting in Washington and Beijing. But between these hubs of high-level politics, a new reality is emerging between China and the state of California, which have built deep and interdependent socioeconomic exchanges that reverberate across the globe.

The proliferation of new technologies threatens to increase the risks of nuclear use. Join us to discuss two of those risks; precision-strike weapons in the hands of U.S. allies and artificial intelligence.