FPRI Featured Bulletin: E-Notes May 2008

Throes of Democracy: The American Civil War Era, 1829 – 1877

FThe Civil War era, it seems to me, hard-wired four telling traits into Americans’ character, traits they would go on to display time and again during their later career as a world power— a careless lack of responsibility,amnesia, an amazing power of resilience, and, to paraphrase G. K. Chesterton, a nationalism with the soul of a church. That coalescence of Union and Creed, power and faith, rendered Americans uniquely prone to sanctimony, but also uniquely immune to cynicism

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FPRI Featured Bulletin: FootNotes May 2008

China’s Relations with the West: The Role of Taiwan and Hong Kong

From the Chinese perspective, so long as Hong Kong and Taiwan remain beyond China’s control, China’s century of humiliation at the hands of Westerners continues. War with China over Taiwan is in fact possible, whether by accident, inadvertence, or design.

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FPRI Featured Bulletin: E-Notes May 2008

The Much Too Promised Land: America’s Elusive Search for Arab-Israeli Peace

For eight years under Bill Clinton, we stumbled at Arab-Israeli peacemaking; for eight years under President Bush we stumbled at how to make war, at least in this part of the world. What is it about America, the greatest power on earth, that accounts for this situation? Why can’t we seem to get it right?

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Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program

The Global "Go-To Think Tanks”: The Leading Public Policy Research Organizations in the World

Gone are the days when a think tank could operate with the motto “research it, write it and they will find it”. Today, think tanks must be lean, mean, policy machines. The report that follows summarizes the findings of a pilot project to identify some of the leading think tanks in the world, and provides lists of what might be called the “go to think tanks” in every region.

From the archives