Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023
The International Issue: Leymah Gbowee’s Movement for Peace | Richard Haas argues that Foreign Policy Begins at Home | Deana Arsenian asks Can Knowledge Make the World More Secure? | Local Problems, Local Expertise in South Africa and Syria and Lebanon | Experts discuss these Nuclear Times | Scholarship in Action | Sharon K. Weiner and Samara Shaz on Nuclear Weapons and You | Andrew Selee on the Multiplier Effect of U.S. Migration Policy | Jim Short on How to Improve Science Education | Marcia Chatelain asks How Can We Better Serve First-Generation College Students? | The Costs of War project explores the ongoing costs of the U.S. post-9/11 wars
- Carnegie ConversationNuclear Times: Understanding Global Nuclear Dynamics
Moderated by Things That Go Boom podcast host Laicie Heeley, three experts — Shannon Bugos, Sébastien Philippe, and Alex Wellerstein — discuss global nuclear dynamics, the personal implications of nuclear policy, and the role of artificial intelligence
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Nuclear Threats
- From the PresidentWelcome to the International Issue of the Carnegie Reporter
In her introduction to the issue, Dame Louise Richardson writes about the role of knowledge and understanding in international security and the importance of removing barriers between scholarship and policymaking
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Scholarship & Policy - ReadThe Costs of War
Research by the Costs of War project, a Corporation grantee, reveals the ongoing costs of the U.S. post-9/11 wars, from human lives and the U.S. global military footprint to internal and external displacement
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Scholarship & Policy
- ReadNuclear Weapons and You
According to a new Chicago Council–Carnegie Corporation of New York poll, 6 in 10 Americans want to know more about nuclear weapons. Good thing — because the arms control process is on the rocks and nuclear weapons threats are growing
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Nuclear Threats - ReadA Starter Glossary of Nuclear Terms
From nuclear parity to plutonium pits, the Corporation’s Sharon Weiner and Samara Shaz define some frequently used words and acronyms to increase your nuclear understanding
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Nuclear Threats - ReadResources for Understanding Nuclear Issues
From Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner to Things That Go Boom, the Corporation’s Sharon Weiner and Samara Shaz curate a list of recommended sources for learning more about the nuclear issues of our times
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Nuclear Threats - ReadNuclear Times: Understanding Global Nuclear Dynamics
Moderated by Things That Go Boom podcast host Laicie Heeley, three experts — Shannon Bugos, Sébastien Philippe, and Alex Wellerstein — discuss global nuclear dynamics, the personal implications of nuclear policy, and the role of artificial intelligence
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Nuclear Threats
- Sustainable PeaceHow to Lead a Successful Movement for Peace
In her Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech, Corporation trustee Leymah Gbowee reflects on leading a nonviolent women’s movement that was pivotal in ending Liberia’s 14-year civil war in 2003
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Sustainable Peace in Africa - Emerging Global OrderForeign Policy Begins at Home
Richard Haass, president emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations, argues that Americans must come together across partisan divides to deter would-be foes and provide security to friends and allies
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Emerging Global Order - From the Archives15 Principles for Peacemakers
Conflict prevention is not just a one-time act, but a broad orientation, a pervasive way of thinking and relating to other leaders. In 1998, former president Jimmy Carter set down the key principles — gleaned from his long experience in the “search for peace” — that can help advance peace negotiations
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Emerging Global Order
- Critical ThinkingCan Knowledge Make the World More Secure?
Deana Arsenian reflects on the ways the Corporation’s International Program advances knowledge and understanding of issues, regions, and countries as an essential — if imperfect — element of its efforts to reduce global threats and promote cooperative approaches to security challenges
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Emerging Global OrderScholarship & Policy - Bridging the GapHow Scholarship Can Inform Foreign Policy for Better Outcomes
The Corporation’s Bridging the Gap subprogram connects the policy and academic communities through networks, training, publishing opportunities, and fellowships, providing policy-oriented scholars with the opportunity to have a real-world impact on foreign policy decision-making
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Scholarship & Policy
- Arab RegionIntegrating Informal Settlements Across Syria and Lebanon
With Corporation support, Ahmad Sukkar researches the ways informal settlements might become a core element in reconstruction efforts in Syria and Lebanon
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Arab Region Transitions - AfricaAddressing Urban Accessibility and Mobility Issues in South Africa
With Corporation support, Hazminei Tsitsi Tamuka Moyo considers how South African cities can address urban accessibility and mobility issues and the marginalizing consequences of past city planning
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023African Academics
- Nuclear Threats
- Emerging Global Order
- Andrew Carnegie FellowsHow Can We Better Serve First-Generation College Students?
Andrew Carnegie Fellow Marcia Chatelain calls for innovative and inclusive ways to teach and support first-generation students across the U.S.
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Student SuccessAndrew Carnegie Fellows - EducationThirteen Ways to Improve Science Education in the U.S.
A new Corporation report offers recommendations for improvements to K–12 science education over the next 10 years, from state standards and instructional materials to professional learning and instruction
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Future of Learning & Work - DemocracyWhat Does the End of Title 42 Mean for U.S. Migration Policy?
Andrew Selee, president of the Migration Policy Institute, assesses how shifts in American immigration policy might reverberate across the region and more broadly around the world
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Immigration - Andrew Carnegie FellowsAndrew Carnegie Fellows Bookshelf: Scholarship with Impact
A selection of some of the notable books that have come out of the Andrew Carnegie Fellows Program since 2015
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Andrew Carnegie Fellows