News + Media

 

Analysis + Opinion

January 6, 2013

Outrage over the culture of rape in India

By Priyanka Borpujari Boston Globe

The recent gang rape and subsequent death of a 23-year-old woman in India's capital has made headlines around the world. 

Analysis + Opinion

January 1, 2013

Japan's shifting strategic discourse

Richard J. SamuelsSigur Center for Asian Studies

After decades of accepting U.S. supremacy in Asia as the foundation of its foreign and security policies, finding the right distance between the U.S. and China is the most important strategic choice facing Japan today. “Getting it just right” with these two powers will require both military and economic readjustments. But it will not be easy.

Analysis + Opinion

December 11, 2012

Use of chemical weapons could be Syria’s ‘bloody crescendo’

Jim WalshWBUR: Cognoscenti

After two years of civil war and more than 40,000 deaths, fears are growing in the West that Syria will unleash chemical weapons in a last-ditch act of desperation.

Analysis + Opinion

December 1, 2012

What’s killing Brazil’s police?

Graham Denyer WillisNew York Times

São Paulo, Latin America’s largest city, continues to descend into a violent blood feud between the police and an organized crime group, the First Command of the Capital, known by its Portuguese initials P.C.C.

Yukio Okamoto

News Release

November 14, 2012

Yukio Okamoto joins CIS

Yukio Okamoto, a former Special Advisor to the Prime Minister of Japan, has been named a 2012-13 Robert E. Wilhelm Fellow. "Yukio Okamoto brings to MIT an unparalleled set of experiences on the world stage. The Center is delighted to have him with us to continue his research and writing, and to work with students and faculty through the next academic year," said Richard Samuels, director of the Center for International Studies and Ford International Professor of Political Science.

In the News

November 2, 2012

How civil wars evolve

Fotini ChristiaMIT News

MIT political scientist’s book shows how even the bloodiest conflicts feature pragmatic alliances — not just ancient sectarian divisions.

précis

November 1, 2012

Activities

The first book from the Center's US-Iran project was published in May—Becoming Enemies: US-Iran Relations and the Iran-Iraq War, 1979-1988; Ordinary people show remarkable capacities for coping with and resisting violent actors in some of the world's most dangerous cities, a new study from the Center shows; The Center launched its first Artist in Residence Program with Kiana Hayeri; DUSP hosted a commemoration of Alice Amsden in the new Media Lab building; The International Security Studies Best Book Award Selection Committee announced the selection of Joshua Rovner, Fixing the Facts: National Security and the Politics of Intelligence (Cornell University Press, 2011) as the recipient of this year's prize; Roger Petersen's book Western Intervention in the Balkans won the ENMISA Distinguished Book Award.

précis

November 1, 2012

End Notes

End Notes features the professional achievements of our scholars, students, and staff. This includes recent awards, speaking engagements, and publications.

précis

November 1, 2012

précis Interview: Philip Khoury, associate provost

Philip Khoury, associate provost, discusses with précis foreign policy in the Middle East, MIT's relationship to the policymaking community, and how an engineering school benefits the humanities and social science community.

Alliance Formation in Civil Wars

précis

November 1, 2012

Alliance formation in civil wars

By Fotini Christia

Fotini Christia, assistant professor of political science, argues that "alliance formation [in civil wars] is tactical and motivated by a concern with victory and the maximization of wartime returns..." précis features an excerpt from her recent book. 

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