The Biden Agenda
A sortable guide to the administration’s policies—and the people putting them into practice.
Argument: Nigeria’s Military Is Part of the Problem. It’s Also the Solution. Nigeria’s Military Is Part of the Problem....
An overloaded health system struggles to deal with a deadly second wave of the coronavirus.
How the literary theorist’s life and work shed light on the epic failure of U.S. Middle East policy.
Modi’s false hope in a raging pandemic.
This weekend, Peruvians may gamble on a leftist political unknown or bring a controversial right-wing politician into office.
Financial capital and the courts are quietly creating the conditions to stop global warming—if politics does its part, too.
And the president is set to announce nominees for two senior USAID posts.
The military regime’s neighbors resist sanctions, fearing it would divide regional powers.
The demise of center-left parties across Europe is a warning to Democrats.
The Houthis have defeated Saudi Arabia—and peace won’t come by dictating terms to the victors.
The recent war in Gaza exposes the limits of a key pillar of the country’s defense strategy.
Ahead of elections this weekend, Mexico’s president has ramped up attacks on civil society groups.
An energy shortage threatens critical semiconductor supply lines as COVID-19 surges.
Market integration only entrenches dependence on Israel.
Kyiv’s big bet on digital money could backfire and make the country’s corruption problems worse.
Forget Manhattan or Monaco; it’s cities like Cleveland that are now attracting ill-gotten money from abroad.
Big Tech companies see an opportunity for growth on the continent, but they risk becoming accessories to authoritarian regimes.
Even after Trump has left office, ultranationalist views are still dominating his party.
Washington’s new focus on human rights could redefine the United States’ long-standing approach.
An exhausted movement finds new support abroad.
When it comes to the mutual relationship, Beijing gets a vote.
We asked 25 experts to grade the administration’s start on foreign policy
The U.S. treasury secretary and the Italian prime minister have spent decades shaping this economy. But can they control what comes next?
What the new president really thinks about the military—and what the military really thinks about him.
Just like Roosevelt, Biden must show that government still works.
Ignoring the central role of race and colonialism in world affairs precludes an accurate understanding of the modern state system.
International relations theorists once explored racism. What has the field lost by giving that up?
Tangled questions of Asian identity need answers that aren’t defined by U.S. terminology alone.
Other countries offer good lessons for acknowledging and redressing past wrongs.
May brought an explosion of violence in Israel and Gaza—plus volcanic eruptions in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, “sea snot” in Turkey, and the delivery of COVID vaccines around the world.
Biden repealed major restrictions on U.S. foreign assistance, but anti-abortion ideology still limits crucial reproductive care in the places that need it most.