Fully-matching results
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Deep Divisions Across the Atlantic | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
Ivo Daalder discusses the annual Munich Security Conference.
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1998 Chicago Council Survey | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
The 1998 Chicago Council Survey results reflect a "guarded engagement" by a largely satisfied superpower.
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2012 Chicago Council Survey: Foreign Policy in the new Millennium | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
The 2012 Chicago Council Survey tracks public opinion on US foreign policy since the September 11 attacks, and includes an assessment of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
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Emma Belcher on Russia's Nuclear Threat | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
If Russia's war on Ukraine continues to escalate, could nuclear weapons enter the picture? Emma Belcher looks at the risk and what we can do to reduce the threat.
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Weak Domestic Demand Now Threatens China's Growth Potential
China will need to promote domestic consumption to reach its potential GDP growth in 2023, argues Yang Yao.
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Russians and Americans Sense a New Cold War | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
Russians and Americans seem to sense a global alignment of democracies versus autocracies, and both publics fear a nuclear exchange.
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Is the UN doing a good job? Just 33% of Americans think so
The United Nations has been grappling with two global conflicts that it has so far been unable to deescalate – the war in Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas war. -
1994 Chicago Council Survey | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
The 1994 Chicago Council survey indicates that American attitudes at both public and leadership levels reflect a "pragmatic internationalism."
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Biden Reaffirms US Commitment to NATO | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
"Intentions matter," Council President Ivo Daalder explains in a conversation with CNN's Jim Sciutto after President Biden's first NATO meetings.
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From an Urban-Suburban-Rural "Divide" to Convergence? | Chicago Council on Global Affairs
There is general agreement in urban, suburban, and rural communities on the economy and climate change, but there’s a difference of opinion on immigration.