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IGP Carnegie Distinguished Fellow Wally Adeyemo writes: "It is not too late to seize the reins of the next great economic reordering and steer the world economy toward a system that lives up to the promise of free trade."
A new fellowship program at SIPA will provide substantial financial support to outstanding students committed to advancing the public good.
Ester Fuchs, professor of public policy and political science at Columbia University breaks down what the national Democratic Party can learn from Mamdani's success in New York City as well as how four candidates running as independents, could affect the outcome of this race.
Robert Y. Shapiro told Newsweek: "Based on this poll and other polling data, no single candidate could simply catch up to Mamdani."
“Some of Ukraine’s strongest defensive positions are in Donetsk, and ceding those defenses would position Russia to reattack in the future from a much more advantageous position,” said David Shimer, who led Ukraine policy on the White House National Security Council during the Biden administration. Ceding the region, he said, would be a “massive concession.”
"A total withdrawal from Donetsk would create vulnerabilities for Ukraine militarily because some of its most robust defenses are there, former U.S. officials and experts say. “Ceding those defenses would position Russia to reattack in the future with more of an advantage,” said David Shimer, a former National Security Council official during the Biden administration, who is now a scholar at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs.
“The transition isn’t accelerating as fast as some people had hoped,” Jason Bordoff, the head of the Center for Global Energy Policy at Columbia University said. “Some of the rosier projections that oil, gas and coal might fall faster aren’t bearing out.”
"Humanitarian assistance—not just food but also water, shelter and medical care that meets the needs of all Gazans—can and must get back on track," writes Jacob J. Lew.
Noah Kaufman, a former adviser to Barack Obama and Joe Biden who is now at Columbia University, argues that climate policy in America has a “path dependency problem.”