Volume 17, Issue 2: Spring 2022
The Spring 2022 Edition was published online in April 2022. Print copies pending. See note from the editors.
Srijan Shukla finds that effective economic rights have a positive relationship with developing countries’ trade flows.
How can governments and funders combat the global education crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic? Piper O’Keefe argues that the key is to invest more resources in teachers—not simply ask more of them.
Brianda Romero Castelán explains how carefully crafted portraits of Afghan women in US politics have obscured the damages caused by the American occupation that, in more than one way, prevented them from achieving fundamental human rights.
A citizen wealth fund could be the right antidote to Mexico's impoverishing populism, argues Martin Rodriguez Rodriguez.
Exacerbating the gender divide proved a successful strategy for the South Korean conservatives, argues Sunghea Khil.
To what extent should foreign and internal policies be aligned? Daniela Philipson Garcia and Ana Velasco analyze Mexico’s feminist foreign policy.
Jasper Vaughn assesses the current state of IRF in U.S. foreign policy and recommends a more equitable and effective approach to international religious freedom.
Jean Vilbert explores how Latin American governments can harness regulatory dynamism to attract foreign direct investment (FDI).
Tyler McBrien discusses the paradoxical role of wargames, initially meant to reduce war, in the endless waging of war.
The "Government of Change'' provides a few promising opportunities, explains Gal Komem.
What does the decoupling of the Chinese and U.S. economies really mean? Brian Wong reviews James Fok’s Financial Cold War.