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From Likes to Violence: How Big Tech is Helping Fuel Extremism

Podcast
Deep Dish on Global Affairs Podcast

Could Big Tech's failure to moderate social media be fueling violence and extremism in Kenya and beyond?

An iPhone displays the apps for Facebook
AP PHOTOS
Tech and Science

Bracing for Trump 2.0

In the News
Foreign Affairs
Daniel W. Drezner

"Many global actors are anxious about the 2024 US presidential election," writes Nonresident Senior Fellow Dan Drezner in Foreign Affairs.

Donald Trump places hand over heart in front of a crowd in Waco, TX, podium with a sign bearing his name at right.
AP Photos
US Foreign Policy

China's Ambitions and George Kennan's Legacy

In the News
Security Dilemma
Paul Heer

Paul Heer weighs in on how Xi Jinping thinks and what role the intelligence community should play in foreign policy.

Chinese President Xi Jinping is seen on screen at the Museum of the Communist Party of China
AP Photos
US Foreign Policy

Trump Didn’t Invent Isolationism

In the News
Foreign Policy
Jordan Tama

History suggests the Republican Party will continue to argue over foreign policy beyond the MAGA era.

Former President Donald Trump stepping off his plane at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on August 24, 2023.
AP Photos
US Foreign Policy

BRICS’ Expansion Is Aimed at Upending the Western-Led Order

In the News
World Politics Review
Paul Poast

Even if BRICS has not yet accomplished anything concrete, the message of dissatisfaction its expansion sends to the West is deafening, Paul Poast writes.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa delivers the XV BRICS summit declaration
AP Photos
Global Politics

Watching US Military Assistance in Africa Go up in Smoke

In the News
Crashing the War Party
Coauthors

Elizabeth Shackelford and Emma Sanderson join the podcast to unpack a new report on why US-Africa policy isn't working.

Nigerian special forces and Chadian troops participate with US advisors in the Flintlock exercise
AP Photos
US Foreign Policy

The Risk of Framing Geopolitics as Us vs. Them

In the News
Jurist
Elizabeth Shackelford

Leaning into the binary distinction between autocracies and autocracies doesn't seem to serve US interests, Elizabeth Shackelford writes.

toy soldiers on a map
Pixabay
US Foreign Policy

The Pitfalls of University-led Growth: The Case of Macomb, Ill.

BLOG
Global Insight by Ella Goeckner-Wald

Universities can serve as economic engines for rural cities, but collaboration between academia, government, and the private sector is key to sustainable growth.

Macomb, Illinois
Ella Goeckner-Wald
Global Economy

From China to Mexico: Tracing the Deadly Fentanyl Trail

Podcast
Deep Dish on Global Affairs Podcast

Deep Dish confronts America’s deadly fentanyl crisis and the struggle to stop the flood of fentanyl from entering the country.

A bag of 4-fluoro isobutyryl fentanyl which was seized in a drug raid is displayed at the Drug Enforcement Administration
AP Photos
Global Health

Food Systems Harm People and Planet - Here Is How We Fix That

In the News
Devex
Ertharin Cousin

Food systems are just as culpable for the accelerating global planetary health, human health, and poverty crises as they are capable of generating the solutions necessary to fix them.

 Cattle are brought to the paddock for milking and watering.
ILRI/Sonja Leitner
Food and Agriculture