
The Carnegie Endowment and the Center on International Cooperation co-sponsored a conference that explored the status and future of U.S. interest in multilateralism after September 11.

Vito Tanzi, Senior Associate at the Carnegie Endowment, discussed how the economic role of the state has changed over the last century and changes that may occur in the decades ahead.
Presenters: Bennett Freeman, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor; Glen Prickett, Senior Vice President, Environmental Leadership in Business, Conservation International; Dennis Rondinelli, Glaxo Distinguished International Professor of Management, University of North Carolina
Presenter: Robert Wright, Author of Nonzero: The Logic of Human Destiny, and The Moral Animal: Evolutionary Psychology and Daily Life; Contributing editor of The New Republic, Time, and Slate

Presenter: Thomas Homer-Dixon, Director of the Peace and Conflict Studies Program and Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Toronto
Presenters: Jody Williams, 1997 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Ambassador for International Campaign to Ban Landmines; Stephen Goose, Program Director, Arms Division, Human Rights Watch

Presenters: Wolfgang Reinicke, Director, UN Vision Project on Global Public Policy Networks; Jan Martin Witte, Research Associate, UN Vision Project on Global Public Policy Networks; Thorsten Benner, Research Associate, UN Vision Project on Global Public Policy Networks and Research Fellow, German Council on Foreign Relations

Presenter: James H. Mittelman, Professor of International Relations in the School of International Service at American University, Washington, D.C.
Presenter: Mark Baskin, Deputy Regional Administrator in Prizren, Kosovo, United Nations Mission in Kosovo
Presenter: Anne-Marie Slaughter, Professor, Harvard Law School