Sentences with phrase «foreign affairs article»

But a recent Foreign Affairs article titled «Arctic Meltdown: The Economic and Security Implications of Global Warming» by a military writer named Scott G. Borgerson is a must - read:
I'm probably best known for having redefined the energy problem in 1976 with a Foreign Affairs article titled «Energy Strategy: The Road Not Taken?»
And the Wildlife Conservation Society's Steven Sanderson discusses his Foreign Affairs article, «Where the Wild Things Were,» worldwide conservation and the Everglades.
Steve: Steven Sanderson's Foreign Affairs article, «Where the Wild Things Were,» is available online.
In our Foreign Affairs article, Mark Blyth and I also suggest that monetary policy has many advantages over fiscal policy — the speed of decision - making and immediacy of impact are non-trivial.

Not exact matches

Moon Chung In, the president's special adviser, said in a contributed article to U.S. magazine Foreign Affairs dated Monday, «What will happen to U.S. forces in South Korea if a peace treaty is signed?
Summers published an article title, «The Age of Secular Stagnation: What It Is and What to Do About It,» in the February issue of Foreign Affairs.
«That this House expresses profound concern that, despite voting 279 in favour and none against the motion calling on the Government to refer genocidal atrocities of Daesh to the United Nations Security Council on 14 April 2016, still, no such referral has been made; recalls the words of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs in an article in the Telegraph on 27 March 2016, Daesh are engaged in what can only be called genocide of the poor Yazidis, though for some baffling reason the Foreign Office still hesitates to use the term genocide; and calls on the Government to ensure that the unanimous will of Parliament is implemented with urgency.»
Thomas Farr, a Georgetown Professor of Religion and International Affairs, in an adaptation of and an article in Foreign Affairs, has argued in First Things that the fostering of democratic societies in Islamic lands must be linked with encouraging Islamic communities themselves to understand the value of religious freedom.
Studies of cargo cults, messianic movements, and Third World millenarianism, including widely read classics such as Peter Worsley's The Trumpet Shall Sound and Bryan Wilson's Magic and the Millennium, have paid close attention to the effects of international relations on domestic religious developments.2 In increasing numbers, books have appeared on the religious situation in strategic parts of the globe, such as the Middle East and Latin America, and with growing frequency articles on American religion refer to issues such as global consciousness, nuclear disarmament, and the effects of U.S. involvement in foreign affairs.
This article is based on conversations with Catherine Barnard, professor of EU Law at the University of Cambridge, Anand Menon, professor of European Politics and Foreign Affairs at King's College London and director of UK in a Changing Europe, Steve Peers, professor of EU, Human Rights and World Trade Law at the University of Essex, Amy Porges, adviser and government representative on WTO negotiations and litigation and free trade agreements, John Springford, director of Research at the Centre for European Reform and other politicians, trade negotiators, civil servants and officials in London, Washington and Brussels who asked not to be named.
Foreign Affairs wrote an interesting article on Barack Obama and Joseph Kony last year that better encapsulates the problem.
In a new article for Foreign Affairs, I discuss the perils of Angola's reliance on declining oil revenues.
George Kennan, after all, may never have been canonized as the patron saint of containment had Hamilton Fish Armstrong, the longtime editor of Foreign Affairs, not encouraged him to publish his anonymous article on «The Sources of Soviet Conduct.»
I wanted to talk to him because he has an opinion piece called «Where the Wild Things Were,» in the current issue of Foreign Affairs which is not the place I expected to see an article about wildlife conservation.
He has an article out in the current issue of strange as it may seem, Foreign Affairs, and we'll talk about that.
This, he points out in an article in Foreign Affairs, is «nearly as unprecedented as baboons sprouting wings.»
Lines are being redrawn, which the May / June 2014 issue of Foreign Affairs reflected with its articles related to «The Return of Geopolitics.»
I stayed up more than a few nights reading a Jay McInerney novel I'd been meaning to read, and appreciated being able to quickly read an article in the latest edition of Foreign Affairs magazine on the subway.
The strategic significance of an opening Arctic recently made the pages of Foreign Affairs magazine, in an article by one of my longtime sources on this issue, Scott Borgerson, a former Coast Guard officer who is now a scholar at the Council on Foreign Relations.
(For another example, focused on the tremendous potential for slowing climate change through action on soot, see the last issue of foreign affairs for an article co-authored with two colleagues here in La Jolla, V. Ramanathan and C. Kennel.)
This funding was given as part of Canada's commitment to UNFCCC [the 1992 climate treaty underlying all recent negotiations toward a new pact] for climate change education and was approved by the «Planning, Advocacy & Innovation» unit at Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs (See UNFCCC Article 6).
Also relevant is «Restoring the Forests,» a 2000 article in Foreign Affairs co-written by Ausubel and David G. Victor (now at the University of California, San Diego)
Michael Levi has a new article in Foreign Affairs entitled America's Energy Opportunity, subtitle How to Harness the New Sources of U.S. Power.
YERGIN AND GRUNWALD IN FOREIGN AFFAIRS MAGAZINE: As we were reviewing this projection, we saw that Yergin's article is a promotion for a longer piece in the September / October issue of the prestigious Foreign Policy Magazine, whose cover has the theme, «Oil: The Long Goodbye» http://www.foreignpolicy.com/­issues/­174/­coFOREIGN AFFAIRS MAGAZINE: As we were reviewing this projection, we saw that Yergin's article is a promotion for a longer piece in the September / October issue of the prestigious Foreign Policy Magazine, whose cover has the theme, «Oil: The Long Goodbye» http://www.foreignpolicy.com/­issues/­174/­coForeign Policy Magazine, whose cover has the theme, «Oil: The Long Goodbye» http://www.foreignpolicy.com/­issues/­174/­contents.
The wind energy market report was much more optimistic, compared with the recent article in the July / August issue of Foreign Affairs which took a hard look at the global green - tech industry overall, not just wind.
Click at the link below to read the entire article on Foreign Affairs.
The November / December 2014 issue of Foreign Affairs features a 9 page article by Bjorn Lomborg.
The submission that the issues which arise here were matters for the Executive or Legislature under Article 120 of the UAE Constitution because they concerned foreign affairs and questions of public policy (ordre public) or a matter for the UAE Supreme Court if there was any serious issue / doubt under the Constitution as to the organ which should determine such questions, falls away once it is seen that waiver of immunity is a question to be determined by the judiciary as part of the contractual and procedural law of the DIFC.
The Government is of the view that it can trigger Article 50 utilising its power under the Royal Prerogative, which allows the Government, on the Sovereign's behalf, to conduct foreign affairs and enter into international treaties.
In a March 21 article on the resolutions, the Swiss - German newspaper Tagesanzeiger noted the skepticism expressed by Switzerland's Ministry of Foreign Affairs about whether fully autonomous weapons will ever be able to comply with international law, notably the principles of distinction and proportionality.
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