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Associate Professor of International Politics, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University
Location: Washington, D.C.
Dan Drezner is an Associate Professor of political science at the University of Chicago. He also taught at University of Colorado at Boulder from 1996 to 1999. He was awarded his Ph.D. in political science from Stanford with a dissertation about the utility of economic statecraft. Dr. Drezner will begin his fellowship research on trade sanctions and human rights issues at the Council in Washington, D.C. and continue on to a trade policy institution.
May 8, 2009, New York, NY
Transcript
What new forms of international financial and monetary coordination and regulation are required in light of the global economic crisis? How should the United States work to reform the Bretton Woods Institutions? Should the BRICs and other developing countries have an increased role at the IMF and World Bank? What are the preconditions for a U.S.-China bargain on global monetary and financial issues?
See more in Financial Crises, International Finance
May 8, 2009
Video
Watch experts discuss how international financial institutions can work together to mitigate the financial crisis, as well as reforms that could make these organizations more effective.
This session was part of the CFR conference: The United States and the Future of Global Governance, which was made possible through the generous support of the Robina Foundation.
See more in Financial Crises, Geoeconomics
May 8, 2009
Audio
Listen to experts discuss how international financial institutions can work together to mitigate the financial crisis, as well as reforms that could make these organizations more effective.
This session was part of the CFR conference: The United States and the Future of Global Governance, which was made possible through the generous support of the Robina Foundation.
See more in Financial Crises, Geoeconomics
February 26, 2007
Transcript
Professor Daniel Drezner discusses his March/April 2007 Foreign Affairs arguing that controversies over the war in Iraq and U.S. unilateralism have overshadowed a more pragmatic and multilateral component of the Bush administration’s grand strategy.
See more in Iraq, Grand Strategy
March/April 2007
Foreign Affairs Article — Summary
Controversies over the war in Iraq and U.S. unilateralism have overshadowed a more pragmatic and multilateral component of the Bush administration's grand strategy: its attempt to reconfigure U.S. foreign policy and international institutions in order to account for shifts in the global distribution of power and the emergence of states such as China and India. This unheralded move is well intentioned and well advised, and Washington should redouble its efforts.
See more in U.S. Strategy and Politics
September 2006
Critical Policy Choice
This book, in the form of a memorandum to the president, suggests two alternative approaches the United States could take to trade policy.
See more in United States, Trade
August 30, 2006
News Release
Trade accounts for nearly a quarter of U.S. gross domestic product. In recent decades, trade has lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty around the world. Furthermore, trade policy inevitably affects national security, employment stability, environmental protection, labor standards, health issues, immigration, and monetary policy—all of which makes the recent implosion of the Doha trade talks all the more significant.
See more in United States, China, Trade
May/June 2004
Foreign Affairs Article — Summary
See more in Economics, Global Governance
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