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Yale's Political Publication Since 1947

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Soldiers for Statecraft: Russia’s Ambitions in Ukraine and the American Response

Axel de VernouJanuary 29, 2022March 6, 2022

World

Revitalizing Turkey’s Future with its Ottoman Past

Allison LazarusFebruary 29, 2012August 13, 2013

Since the inception of its protracted European Union bid in 2005, Turkey has scrambled to fulfill the requirements dictated by current E.U. member states, including human rights reform and far-reaching economic legislation. These talks have recently ground to a halt,…

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A Tale of Two Revolutionaries

Donna HorningFebruary 28, 2012August 13, 2013

The Antithetical Legacies of Václav Havel and Kim Jong-Il On December 18, 2011, history was provided with an odd coincidence that invites further reflection — the simultaneous deaths of Václav Havel, a dissident playwright, essayist, and poet who became the…

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Female Leadership in Latin America

Rachel KubiFebruary 26, 2012August 13, 2013

Latin America is a region of unlikely contrasts.  UNICEF data reveal that 29 percent of women in Latin America and the Caribbean are married by age 18, yet Latin America leads the world in number of female presidents and prime…

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More on Syria from Karam Nachar

Justin SchusterFebruary 12, 2012August 13, 2013

In our last issue, The Politic spoke with Karam Nachar, a PhD candidate at Princeton University and Syrian activist. This past Friday, Nachar appeared on MSNBC’s national program, Up with Chris Hayes, where he further discussed the situation in Syria. Watch…

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The Price of Politics

Justin SchusterFebruary 6, 2012August 13, 2013

The value of a human life is quantifiable: $162 million in annual arms sales, $550 million for combat training jets, $4 billion in defense contracts, and regional geopolitical interests. On February 4, after two days of indiscriminate violence, over 300…

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American Interventionism and the Tragedy of Foreign Policy

Noah RemnickDecember 20, 2011December 31, 2013

Since World War I, every American president has had to confront the potential agonies, moral uncertainties, and quagmires of military intervention abroad. Certainly, the price of intervention weighs on Barack Obama even as he pulls out troops from Iraq and…

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Will South Sudan Survive?

Meredith PotterDecember 19, 2011January 27, 2013

By Meredith Potter SIX years ago, the civil war that ravaged Sudan from 1983 to 2005 came to an end. The Comprehensive Peace Agreement, which ended the conflict, provided the people of southern Sudan an opportunity to vote in a…

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Who Will Save Bosnia From Itself?

Vinicius LindosoDecember 19, 2011January 27, 2013

By Vinicius G. Lindoso ONCE upon a relatively recent time, Bosnia-Herzegovina (BiH) was perhaps the hottest conflict spot in the world. Sarajevo attracted some of the most ambitious journalists seeking to boost their careers by reporting first-hand on the horrors of…

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