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Below you will find a chronological list of current Council projects. You can search by issue or region by selecting the appropriate category. In addition to this sorting control, you can search for specific subjects within the alphabetical, regional, and issue categories by choosing from the selections in the drop-down menu below.
Each project page contains the name of the project director, a description of the project, a list of meetings it has held, and any related publications, transcripts, or videos.
February 1, 1997—February 1, 1997
| Director: | Ruth Wedgwood |
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December 1, 1996—Present
| Staff: | Richard K. Betts, Adjunct Senior Fellow for National Security Studies, Council on Foreign Relations |
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| Fellows: | Richard K. Betts, Adjunct Senior Fellow for National Security Studies, Council on Foreign Relations Max Boot, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick Senior Fellow for National Security Studies Stephen E. Flynn, Ira A. Lipman Senior Fellow for Counterterrorism and National Security Studies Stephen Biddle, Senior Fellow for Defense Policy John B. Bellinger III, Adjunct Senior Fellow for International and National Security Law Paul Lettow, Adjunct Senior Fellow Marisa L. Porges, International Affairs Fellow in Residence Nicole E. Lewis, National Intelligence Fellow |
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The September 11 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington have forever blurred the line between defense and homeland security. The Bush administration continues to stress the need for U.S. armed forces to “take the fight to the enemy,” to push the battlefield away from U.S. shores. At the same time, efforts are ongoing to better secure the U.S. homeland against new terrorist attacks on American soil.
February 1, 1998—March 1, 1998
| Director: | Richard L. Garwin |
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October 1, 1999—August 1, 2000
| Director: | Marine Lieut. Gen. (ret.) Bernard E. Trainor |
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May 1, 1999—June 1, 1999
| Director: | Jessica Stern, Former Adjunct Fellow, Superterrorism, Council on Foreign Relations |
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January 1, 2005—Present
This series has been made possible by the generous support of the Population Resource Center.
March 1, 1999—December 31, 1999
| Director: | Richard W. Murphy |
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| Chair: | Lawrence J. Korb, Senior Fellow, Center for American Progress |
| Staff: | Gideon Rose, Managing Editor, Foreign Affairs |
January 1, 2003—June 30, 2004
| Chair: | Kenneth Lieberthal |
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| Staff: | Adam Segal, Maurice R. Greenberg Senior Fellow for China Studies |
September 1, 1996—May 1, 1998
| Director: | Ann R. Markusen |
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January 1, 1997—June 1, 1997
| Staff: | Richard N. Haass, President, Council on Foreign Relations |
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January 1, 1999—December 31, 1999
Current debate about the nature of the emerging international landscape is disappointingly thin. Contentious theories about the end of history and the clash of civilizations aside, the analytic community has made little progress in mapping out the key elements of a new international system. This group will examine contending visions of order and seek to generate a more fertile discussion of desirable outcomes and how policymakers can achieve them. Analysts working on these questions and their implications for American grand strategy will make presentations to the group. The project will lead to a "white paper" for the administration that takes office in 2001. In addition, Charles Kupchan will produce a book, as well as other shorter articles and op-ed pieces.
December 1, 1998—May 1, 1999
| Staff: | Richard K. Betts, Adjunct Senior Fellow for National Security Studies, Council on Foreign Relations |
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January 1, 2003—May 19, 2004
| Staff: | James M. Goldgeier, Whitney Shepardson Senior Fellow for Transatlantic Relations |
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This roundtable seeks to identify key “over-the-horizon” issues related to the upcoming EU and NATO enlargements and explore both the anticipated as well as potentially unanticipated consequences of them, each of which will dramatically increase the institution’s size and scope. The first two sessions, held in March and April of 2003, laid out the general issues at stake in each enlargement, while subsequent sessions will examine issues such as the future of the Euro, the effect of the enlargements on countries further to the East, and European demographic trends.
November 1, 1996—May 1, 1997
| Director: | Alberta Arthurs |
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Policymakers in the early twenty-first century have a range of alternatives—short of all-out war—designed to influence the behavior of nations that have violated international law or denied fundamental rights to their citizens. Increasingly, countries and institutions have drawn on these measures to try to head off or halt a conflict and mitigate its aftermath. The United Nations has taken the lead in mounting various missions, but other institutions—the African Union (AU) in the Darfur crisis in Sudan and the European Union (EU) in Bosnia—have also expanded their roles as peacekeepers and humanitarian helpers.
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May 1, 2002—June 30, 2003
May 1, 2001—June 30, 2004
| Director: | Joe Siegle |
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The Democracy Promotion Roundtable is a monthly series of seminars examining various topical issues facing the democracy promotion community. The sessions aim to advance the policy debate on economic, political, and bureaucratic constraints to the current wave of democratization - affecting some 90 countries around the world. With this aim in mind, the roundtables serve as a forum to bring policy practitioners, non-governmental democracy promotion agencies, academics, think-tanks, and advocacy professionals together to discuss emerging policy issues involving democratization - ideas that are vetted by the collective experience of the participants. Sessions normally involve 2-3 panelists, each presenting for approximately 10-15 minutes on a selected theme. The remainder of the 90 minute sessions are opened for questions and broader dialogue. Some of the panelists that have participated in these sessions include William Easterly, Carl Gersham, Harold Koh, Paula Dobriansky, and George Folsom, among others.
May 1, 1998—September 1, 2000
| Staff: | Gideon Rose, Managing Editor, Foreign Affairs |
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February 1, 2002—May 1, 2003
| Chair: | W. Bowman Cutter |
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Meetings of this series help to review and critique draft chapters of Jagdish Bhagwati's book analyzing the origins of globalization, its social consequences, and the institutional innovations—domestic and international—that govern it. Bhagwati assesses the various critiques of globalization through the lenses of poverty, insecurity, labor standards, gender, the environment, culture, sovereignty, and democratic deficit and concludes that globalization is not merely economically benign, but socially benign as well.
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