The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace is the oldest international affairs think tank in the United States and is pioneering the first global think tank.
The Carnegie Moscow Center was the first public policy research institution of its size and kind in the region. The center brings together senior researchers from across the Russian political spectrum and Carnegie’s global centers to provide an open forum for the discussion of critical issues.
The Carnegie–Tsinghua Center for Global Policy, through its partnership with Tsinghua University, brings together top experts from China and the international community to engage in collaborative dialogue and research on common global challenges.
The Carnegie Middle East Center is a recognized source of informed policy research and analysis on the challenges of political and socioeconomic development, peace, and security in the greater Middle East.
Carnegie Europe aims to foster new thinking on the daunting international challenges shaping Europe’s role in the world.
The Serbia-Kosovo agreement proves that clever diplomacy combined with the power of the prospect of EU enlargement can still deliver significant results.
After President Obama’s visit to Jerusalem last month, there were high hopes in Washington and NATO for a turning point in relations between Israel and Turkey.
The Dutch have not suddenly become Euroskeptics. The Netherlands has always been reserved toward Europe; it has just managed, for a long time, to hide it.
A real discussion of the EU’s interests in Ukraine that moves beyond generalities may help member states avoid further frustrations and help the EU get more out of its relations with Kyiv.
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has conceived an audacious plan to enhance Turkey’s regional standing, but its success depends on ending the country's thirty year conflict with its own Kurdish population.
With evolving strategic priorities for the United States and radical constraints on the U.S. defense budget, now is the time for Europe to take more ownership of its defense and security.
Turkey faces a potentially critical alignment of stars. If it overcomes all the challenges ahead, Ankara may make a spectacular return to the international stage.
Every week leading experts answer a new question from Judy Dempsey on the foreign and security policy challenges shaping Europe’s role in the world.
If growth does not return to Europe in the next two years, the political situation will become more difficult.
Cities, which account for 75 percent of Europe’s population and generate 85 percent of its GDP, have an important role to play in helping to meet key climate-change and economic targets.
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