A narrow focus on the political clout of Asian Americans often obscures a more fundamental question: what exactly do Asian American voters want from their government?
As countries gather in Egypt, a major theme will be whether the developed world will assist poorer countries in climate adaptation.
The first one and by far the most important one is a regulation on recommendation algorithms.
The midterms may cost him Congress, but they’ll also ignite a new round of Republican infighting.
Countries around the world are struggling to bridge the gap between citizens and political elites. Innovative practices outside the West, while far from ideal, should be considered in debates about democratic renewal in Europe.
The acclaimed BBC series TraumaZone taps into the unsavory world of the Russian economic reforms of the 1990s that proved fatal to democracy, and challenges the popular myth about the Russian 1990s as a blessed era of liberation.
Jair Bolsonaro’s historic defeat in Brazil’s presidential elections yesterday marks the 15th straight opposition victory in Latin America. Over the past years, not a single democratic leader in the region has managed to get re-elected or pick his or her successor.
Spot analysis from Carnegie scholars on events relating to the Middle East and North Africa.
Democracy promotion has been a long-standing objective of U.S. foreign policy. Indeed, America’s role as the shining “city upon a hill” has shaped its foreign policy through decades of war and peace.
In an interview, Hussein Ibish discusses why U.S.-Saudi relations have deteriorated so rapidly.