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2021 February

New Rivals to Nation States: The Geopolitics of Big Tech

While few scholars have narrativized it as such, a few seemingly disconnected events over the past year might be indicators that we are entering an era in which, at least in the geo-economic sphere, nation states will have a set of new and powerful rivals: transnational corporations. These legal entities – from more narrowly-focused social...

Challenges Facing Biden’s Latin America Policy

On issues from competition with China to the place of tariffs in trade policy, notable affinities exist between the Biden and Trump administration’s foreign policies. In Latin American relations, however, President Biden has sought to distinguish himself from his predecessor, vowing to center his policy on democracy and human rights, with diplomacy as its key...

Limited Options: The Biden Administration Faces Myanmar’s Coup

It’s been a week since a military junta detained State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi and President Win Myint, ending a decade of quasi-civilian rule and marking Myanmar’s first coup since 1988. Tens of thousands have taken to the streets, demanding a restoration of a government that won a landslide re-election last November, the largest...

Renouncing the Reset: U.S.-Russia Relations under President Biden

Much like Middle East peace, improving U.S.-Russia relations has been an elusive goal of presidential diplomacy for decades. President Bush spoke warmly of the trust between himself and Russia’s Vladimir Putin in 2001, President Obama memorably sought a “reset” with Russia in 2009, and the election of President Trump in 2016 engendered hopes of a...