Political Reform

    • Event

    Issue Brief: Russia on the Eve of the Presidential Elections

    • March 20, 2000
    • Washington, D.C.

    The "revolutionary stage" of the post-Soviet era is over. Russia is now facing a second conversion: from the post-Soviet era of transition into a consolidated Russian nation-state. The priority for the Yeltsin regime was to minimize the harm of the fragmentation of the Soviet Union. For Putin, the priority will be to create a new unified national identity.

    • Commentary

    Burden of Power is Having to Wield It

    • Robert Kagan, William Kristol
    • March 19, 2000
    • The Washington Post

    The present danger is that the United States will shrink from its responsibilities as the world's dominant power and--in a fit of absentmindedness, or parsimony or indifference--will allow the international order that it sustains to collapse. The present danger is one of declining strength, flagging will and confusion about our role in the world.

    • Event

    Transnational Civil Society Networks

    Presenter: Dr. Ann Florini, Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

    • Commentary

    Reforms in Kyrgyzstan Go Well

    Throughout the former Soviet Union, people are dissatisfied with the standard of living and corruption. Contrary to what people in Kyrgyzstan tend to think, Kyrgyzstan comes out pretty well on most accounts.

    • Event

    Fixing Responsibility for the Internally Displaced

    Breakfast Briefing on the U.S. government's role in helping the internally displaced and the prospect of expanding UNHCR's work

    • Commentary

    Indifference to Democracy

    • Testimony

    Russia's Foreign Policy

    Time is running short for Russia to engineer a sustained economic recovery. Putin's first term, the next four years, may be its last chance. If Putin does not do noticeably better than Russia, then we might in fact be facing a world without Russia, without Russian power, and with all the geopolitical and geoeconomic complications that would entail.

    • Commentary

    Biggest Issue of All

    Foreign policy is playing a big role in the 2000 Republican primary contest. Bigger than education. Bigger than campaign finance reform. As big as Social Security. Public interest in foreign policy is one big reason John McCain is giving George Bush a run for his money. McCain has convinced many Republican voters that he will be a stronger world leader. The difference is biography.

    • Research

    Democracy Assistance and NGO Strategies in Post-Communist Societies

    • John Glenn
    • February 01, 2000
    • Carnegie

    • Commentary

    Dewy-Eyed About Democracy? Hardly

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