We are taking a brief break with posts this week. I’d like to wish all my readers all the best for this holiday season and in the new year. Regular posting will resume next week.
We are taking a brief break with posts this week. I’d like to wish all my readers all the best for this holiday season and in the new year. Regular posting will resume next week.
The logic of globalization implies that the U.S. economy will become more export-oriented, says Tyler Cowen But what does that really mean for American society and politics—especially if we succeed?
Common knowledge about the relationship between demographic pressures and economics is commonly wrong, writes Philip Auerswald. Under current, and especially future, social and technological circumstances, the more people the better.
The stakeholder model of China’s full integration into the current liberal global order fails to reckon with the worldview and political interests of the Chinese Communist Party, argues John Lee.
The U.S. exit from Afghanistan will have far-reaching strategic implications for all of Asia, says Rajan Menon. The American preoccupation with a narrow conception of these implications ill serves the U.S. national interest
Adam Garfinkle
Peter Berger
Adam Garfinkle
Adam Garfinkle
Adam Garfinkle
Adam Garfinkle
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, Professor Berger.
Our thanks for your excellent and thought provoking posts and of course Merry Christmas and Happy New Year,Professor.
To lift a scene out of Robert Musil’s “A Man Without Qualities” perhaps we should wish a Non-Nietzsche New Year to Dr. Berger and his interlocutors.
Sir, enjoy and benefit from much deserved respite as well as Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.