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Alarmed by the faltering state of American democracy, the philanthropic world is divided between those focused on reducing polarization and those embracing adversarial advocacy.
What has happened in Israel these many months has shown the power that people possess to safeguard their democracy when threatened.
Odessa is a very cosmopolitan city and always prided itself on not being defined by any single nationality. While it has certainly rejected Russia, its place in the new Ukraine is still being negotiated.
Today people are seeing how an allergic reaction to authority and hierarchy leads them to hide power relations behind a series of euphemisms that obscure more than they illuminate.
Three factors explain Erdogan’s stronger-than-expected first-round performance.
It’s time to look at the problem differently. Those attempting to address the issue should move away from attempts to regulate disinformation and toward the ecology of the information environment more generally.
Can a military superpower maintain its global dominance even if its population is shrinking? What about when its population is ageing and will soon be dominated by the elderly? These are not hypothetical questions; they are happening right now.
The world’s governments are currently dedicating enormous resources to containing Covid-19 and its mutations.
Political science has been slow to grapple with climate change, but it can play a critical role in addressing obstacles to nation-wide action. Francis Fukuyama's latest.
Just mentioning certain years in history like 1789 (the French Revolution), 1945 (the end of World War II) or 1989 (the fall of the Berlin Wall) is enough to bring to mind profound transformations. So it’s worth asking, what will we eventually look back on as the first iconic year of the 21st century?