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Andrew Scobell on Taiwan’s Elections

Andrew Scobell on Taiwan’s Elections

Monday, January 8, 2024

The United States and China are watching closely as Taiwan prepares for elections on January 13. But while the stakes are high, USIP’s Andrew Scobell says there is a relative consensus among candidates regarding Taiwan’s foreign policy: “Whoever wins the election, we’re likely to see much more continuity than change.”

Type: Podcast

Susan Stigant on the Recent Crises in the Red Sea

Susan Stigant on the Recent Crises in the Red Sea

Tuesday, January 2, 2024

While the U.S. tends to separate its policies on Africa and Middle East, USIP’s Susan Stigant says recent crises in the Red Sea highlight that “this is really an interconnected space” that currently lacks “any infrastructure … that connects together those who are making decisions” along the sea’s eastern and western shores.

Type: Podcast

Mark Feierstein on Venezuela’s Recent Push to Claim Part of Guyana

Mark Feierstein on Venezuela’s Recent Push to Claim Part of Guyana

Wednesday, December 20, 2023

By intensifying Venezuela’s claim to resource-rich territory in neighboring Guyana, the Maduro regime is “trying to link this international dispute with his own domestic politics” in order to “whip up nationalist sentiment” ahead of 2024 Venezuelan elections, says USIP’s Mark Feierstein.

Type: Podcast

Kathleen Kuehnast on a Survivor-Centric Path to Ending Sexual Violence in War

Kathleen Kuehnast on a Survivor-Centric Path to Ending Sexual Violence in War

Thursday, December 14, 2023

Conflict-related sexual violence “not just violates the physical, but the mental and social integrity of societies.” To address this crime, USIP’s Kathleen Kuehnast says we need a survivor-centered approach: “Survivors are experts, they need to be [present] at every part of our understanding and … policy-shaping.”

Type: Podcast

Gender

Gordon Peake on COP28 and Climate Financing

Gordon Peake on COP28 and Climate Financing

Monday, December 4, 2023

As COP28 continues, it’s estimated that the world needs to invest $5.9 trillion to stave off climate change. “The big question now is … who’s going to pay for all this,” says USIP’s Gordon Peake, adding that “we also need to tamp down the use of fossil fuels” to prevent the bill for growing even more.

Type: Podcast

Environment

Andrew Cheatham on the Private Sector’s Role in Conflict Resolution

Andrew Cheatham on the Private Sector’s Role in Conflict Resolution

Wednesday, November 29, 2023

As the international community discusses new approaches for building peace, the private sector is “increasingly a major part of these geopolitical discussions,” says USIP’s Andrew Cheatham, with more and more “partnerships of states and private sector corporations working together to pursue national interests.”

Type: Podcast

Global Policy

Priscilla Clapp on the Recent Success of Myanmar’s Resistance

Priscilla Clapp on the Recent Success of Myanmar’s Resistance

Monday, November 20, 2023

Increased coordination between various elements of Myanmar’s resistance has sparked massive gains, says USIP’s Priscilla Clapp: “In just a few weeks, the opposition forces have managed to dislodge the military from their bases and encampments” along many parts of the borders with China, Thailand, India and Bangladesh.

Type: Podcast

Kathleen Kuehnast on Preventing Conflict-Related Sexual Violence

Kathleen Kuehnast on Preventing Conflict-Related Sexual Violence

Wednesday, November 15, 2023

Last month, the U.N. Security Council echoed past assessments that not enough has been done to address conflict-related sexual violence. But researchers “have established that this particular crime of war is not inevitable,” says USIP’s Kathleen Kuehnast, and there are new strategies for “how best to address the trauma” and prevent it.

Type: Podcast

Gender

Heather Ashby on How the Israel-Hamas War Affects Russia and Ukraine

Heather Ashby on How the Israel-Hamas War Affects Russia and Ukraine

Monday, November 6, 2023

The conflict in the Middle East is helping divert attention away from Russia’s war in Ukraine. And despite rumors of peace talks, USIP’s Heather Ashby says neither side seems willing to budge: “I don’t think people should be optimistic that there will be negotiations … even with a third party trying to bring the sides together.”

Type: Podcast

Andrew Scobell on China’s Aggression in the South China Sea

Andrew Scobell on China’s Aggression in the South China Sea

Monday, October 30, 2023

In asserting its claims in the South China Sea, Beijing “recognizes that international law is not on its side,” says USIP’s Andrew Scobell. Instead, China has resorted to gray-zone provocations against the Philippines and others that “are deliberate, on China’s part, to keep [the situation] below the threshold of war.”

Type: Podcast