News + Media

 
Jacey Fortin

News Release

September 8, 2016

Human rights journalist joins CIS

Jacey Fortin, a freelance journalist who is based in Africa, has been selected as this year’s Elizabeth Neuffer Fellow. She has covered human rights, politics, economic development, and media freedom in the Horn of Africa. She has reported on the civil war in South Sudan, militancy in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and violent unrest in Ethiopia.

Lourdes Melgar

News Release

September 8, 2016

Melgar named Robert E. Wilhelm Fellow

Mexico's former deputy secretary of energy for hydrocarbons, Lourdes Melgar, has been named a Robert E. Wilhelm Fellow. Melgar played a key role in the design and implementation of Mexico's historic energy reform. Her work has begun to transform Mexico's energy sector into a modern and competitive environment.

NATO-Ukraine Commission working session, 2014 / Photograph: Paul Shaw

In the News

August 22, 2016

NATO has problems, but Trump won’t fix them

Simon WaxmanBoston Review

For Barry Posen, NATO and other permanent alliances are not just a financial drain; they also arguably make Americans less safe, writes Simon Waxman in the Boston Review. Posen refers to such security subsidies as “welfare for the rich.”

A municipal worker dances as voters line up in a township near Durban to cast their votes in South Africa’s Aug. 3 elections.

Analysis + Opinion

August 12, 2016

Here are 4 reasons that South Africa’s ANC lost ground in this month’s elections

Nina McMurry, Philip Martin, Evan Lieberman and Daniel de KadtThe Washington Post

On Aug. 3, South African municipal elections delivered a startling result. The African National Congress won the majority of votes nationwide, as it has in every election since it brought apartheid to an end in 1994. But this year, for the first time, the ANC looked vulnerable, and secured only 53.9% of votes cast throughout the country, its first result below 60%.

Clothes and weapons belonging to soldiers involved in the coup attempt that have now surrendered lie on the ground abandoned on Bosphorus Bridge on July 16, 2016, Istanbul, Turkey. (Gokhan Tan/Getty Images)

In the News

July 18, 2016

From Turkey to Nice, looking at safety and stability around the globe

Here & Now

Here & Now's Meghna Chakrabarti speaks with security analyst Jim Walsh about what instability in that country could mean for the rest of the world, as well as what we’re learning about the recent terrorist attack in Nice, France.

Ships

Analysis + Opinion

July 13, 2016

The strategic implications of the South China Sea tribunal’s award

M. Taylor FravelThe National Interest

On July 12, the tribunal hearing the case issued its ruling that can only be described as a huge win for the Philippines. Digesting all 507 pages of the award will take time, allowing only for preliminary judgments to be made. I discuss several strategic implications.

Barry Posen

News Release

June 26, 2016

Posen named Kissinger Chair at Kluge Center

Barry Posen has been appointed the next Henry A. Kissinger Chair in Foreign Policy and International Relations at the Library of Congress John W. Kluge Center. Posen will use the residency to study the implications for the United States of a multipolar international order.

Repal 2016

News@E40

June 16, 2016

Repal 2016 at MIT

The Center was the main sponsor of the Third Annual Repal Conference, hosted this year at MIT. Repal is a network of researchers (institutionally affiliated with universities in Latin America, North America, and Europe) interested in promoting and giving greater visibility to new studies in the political economy of Latin America. 

George W. Rathjens

News@E40

June 10, 2016

Rathjens, Professor Emeritus, dies at 90

George W. Rathjens, professor emeritus of political science and a founder of the Security Studies Program, died May 27 at age 90. Trained as a chemist, Rathjens is best known for his contributions to the theory and practice of nuclear arms control. MIT News Story

Hand holding globe

News@E40

June 9, 2016

IPL funds 13 MIT projects

The International Policy Lab (IPL) concluded its first Institute-wide Call for Proposals this past January. The IPL awarded six fully supported projects ($10,000 plus staff assistance) and seven partially supported projects. Roughly half of these projects address energy and environmental policy, while the rest are equally distributed among international security, biology and health, and big data and privacy policy issues. For a complete list of projects click here.

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