What went wrong with President Moon’s ambitious policy of engagement? Jackson’s own Eunjung Irene Oh explains.
Read MoreAndrew Doris explains why analogies to peacetime garrisons understate the costs of the Afghanistan intervention.
Read MoreLópez Obrador’s credibility and legacy will be determined by his response to the Ayotzinapa case, seven years ago. Olivia Mozdzierz explains why.
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Read MoreLebanon’s system of impunity started with the 1991 General Amnesty. Ryan Saadeh explains how.
Read MoreWhat do media organizations owe war reporters, given the psychiatric risks they take?
Read MoreHundreds of thousands of American firearms are smuggled into Mexico each year. Mexican diplomat María Rodríguez-Domínguez explains how the two countries can confront the illicit trade.
Read MoreBy Hacer Berra Akcan
What are mazar festivals, and why do they matter to Uyghur identity? Hacer Berra Akcan explains why they deserve protection.
Read MoreBy Annie Crabill
Book Review of China’s Foreign Policy Since 1978: Return to Power, by Nicholas Khoo (2020, Edward Elgar)
Read MoreBy Ehi Agbashi, Nivana Tesfayohannes, Temiloluwa Adeyemi, and Osasenaga Aghayere
Why was #EndSARS a powerful moment in Nigerian history? And what comes next?
Read MoreBy Zhenyu Zhang
Zhenyu Zhang, a research assistant at Cornell University, explores how Beijing employs diversionary nationalism as a tactic to distract from possible instability.
Read MoreBy Samir Bhatnagar
Samir Bhatnagar argues that concerted efforts from the state are required to expand farmers’ access to institutional credit in India.
Read MoreBy Noah Yosif
Why has climate activism not yet led to significant divestment in fossil fuels from banks?
Read MoreBy Hyppolite Ntigurirwa
Hyppolite Ntigurirwa, a Yale University 2020 World Fellow, uses ethnographic data to demonstrate how words can contribute to post-genocide reconciliation in Rwanda.
Read MoreBy Merve Hannah O’Keefe
Merve Hannah O’Keefe, a graduate student at Monash University, explains how Me Too reporting has affected journalists covering sexual violence, survivors, and perpetrators.
Read MoreBy Nellie Petlick
Yale Jackson graduate student Nellie Petlick explores how the United States could reinvent its public diplomacy strategy to directly address topics of race and racism abroad.
Read MoreBy Anoush Baghdassarian and Sherin Zadah
The authors shed light on crimes committed against the predominantly Kurdish community in Afrin, Syria.
Read MoreBy Laura Edwards
Laura Edwards of the University of Pennsylvania draws attention to the rise in investment treaty claims involving protestors, and developments to codify the right to protest in international human rights law.
Read MoreBy Sophie Zinser and Dr. Hannah Thinyane
Integrating leaps in technology into the existing multilateral initiatives, local legal policies, and social movements against human trafficking will be the most effective way to address the problem at scale.
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