Foreign Policy Magazine

from the editor

a Harvard professor named Samuel P. Huntington and a wealthy diplomat and investment banker named Warren Demian Manshel decided to start a new journal. The United States, they worried, was on the brink of a crisis—a whole set of them, in fact. The grand strategy it had followed with such success since the end of World War II had taken a terrible turn, driving the country into a slow-motion meat grinder

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Foreign Policy Magazine

Foreign Policy Magazine2 min read
Diverse Campus, Flexible Curriculum Prepare Graduates for Fulfilling International Careers
Diversity is at the heart of Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA), both in its student body and graduate program learning pathways. Students hail from nearly 100 countries, with more than 50 languages spoken on camp
Foreign Policy Magazine2 min readIntelligence (AI) & Semantics
Flexible Curriculum Allows Students to Follow Their Global Passions
The most popular courses for today’s global affairs students match developments making headlines: artificial intelligence and disinformation (fake news), authoritarianism and the weakening of democracy, and the environment. Master’s degree students a
Foreign Policy Magazine1 min read
The Promise And Pitfalls Of Climate Policy
RISING GLOBAL temperatures and increasingly frequent and severe weather events make effective climate-related policy and investments ever more urgent. If unabated, severe and irreparable climate change could further destabilize food and water systems

Related Books & Audiobooks