Post Archives

Category: Global Commons Working Group

Displaying 1 – 10 of 12
  • Global Commons Working Group

    Aftershocks from Gaza: Shifting Regional (dis)Order (Part 2)

    In the spring of 2025, the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy (ISD) convened the Schlesinger Series in Strategic Surprises and New Global Commons working group titled “Aftershocks from Gaza.” Over two meetings, participants examined the cascading regional and global effects of the October 7 Hamas attacks and Israel’s subsequent war in Gaza. The participants […]

    Aftershocks from Gaza: Shifting Regional (dis)Order (Part 2)
  • Global Commons Working Group

    Aftershocks from Gaza: From Local to Global Consequences (Part 1)

    In the spring of 2025, the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy (ISD) convened the Schlesinger Series in Strategic Surprises and New Global Commons working group titled “Aftershocks from Gaza.” Over two meetings, participants examined the cascading regional and global effects of the October 7 Hamas attacks and Israel’s subsequent war in Gaza. The participants […]

    Aftershocks from Gaza: From Local to Global Consequences (Part 1)
  • Global Commons Working Group

    Mission Critical: Securing America’s Critical Minerals

    The United States and its allies and partners face a two-pronged crisis. Increases in global temperatures call for the rapid expansion of critical mineral infrastructure—to include mines and refinement—if we hope to deploy the technology needed to avoid the worst effects of climate change. Meanwhile, the United States’ primary geopolitical adversary has obtained a near-monopoly […]

    Mission Critical: Securing America’s Critical Minerals
  • Global Commons Working Group

    The Ripple Effect: A U.S. Diplomatic Strategy for a Changing World Order

    Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine upended what policymakers thought they knew about the world and territorial military aggression. The ensuing war has brought destruction to Europe unlike anything since the Second World War. Regardless of how the war ends, several strategic trends, whether entirely new or preexisting and now reinforced, have set in a […]

    The Ripple Effect: A U.S. Diplomatic Strategy for a Changing World Order
  • Global Commons Working Group

    Enemies Foreign and Domestic: Confronting Kleptocrats at Home and Abroad

    As Putin and his kleptocratic regime of oligarchs wage a devastating war in Ukraine, the costs of corruption have never been so starkly visible. Beyond Russia, recent examples of corruption in China, Afghanistan, the Northern Triangle, the Solomon Islands, and elsewhere, prove that rampant corruption poses a significant threat to aspirations for a greener, healthier, […]

    Enemies Foreign and Domestic: Confronting Kleptocrats at Home and Abroad
  • Global Commons Working Group

    Peace Through Food: Ending the Hunger-Instability Nexus

    In the twentieth century, humankind made phenomenal steps to increase food production. But today, complex and interrelated issues drive an increase in food insecurity globally, and propel conflict, migration, and human insecurity. Nearly a billion people, at a minimum, are malnourished or suffer the pains of hunger—while the world wastes a third of food produced. […]

    Peace Through Food: Ending the Hunger-Instability Nexus
  • Global Commons Working Group

    The New Weapon of Choice: Technology and Information Operations Today

    In recent years, a growing number of governments, non-state actors, and citizens have rapidly expanded their use of pernicious information operations against other countries and even their fellow citizens. Social media and the internet have become the main tool. The current technological revolution has lowered the cost of entry for those wishing to spread misinformation and […]

    The New Weapon of Choice: Technology and Information Operations Today
  • Global Commons Working Group

    The Rise of Metropolitanism: The International Order and Sub-National Actors

    The growth and international clout of cities and sub-state actors has been unparalleled in recent decades. These players seek agency in the international arena, forming networks at the sub-state level that help shape new organizing principles for international cooperation on Global Commons issues like climate, health, transnational crime, and migration. These types of issues will […]

    The Rise of Metropolitanism: The International Order and Sub-National Actors
  • Global Commons Working Group

    Religious Intolerance and America’s Image and Policies Abroad

    The Oct. 27, 2018 attack on worshipers in Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue was a stark reminder that hate crimes and religious persecution threaten not just individuals and communities, but undermine fundamental human freedoms. A new ISD report on “Religious Intolerance and America’s Image and Policies Abroad” examines the rise in domestic hate crimes against […]

    Religious Intolerance and America’s Image and Policies Abroad
  • Global Commons Working Group

    The New Arctic: Navigating the Realities, Possibilities, and Problems

    A July 2018 ISD report on “The New Arctic: Navigating the Realities, Possibilities, and Problems”  explores the implications of the New Arctic, and the broader geopolitical repercussions of these changes. The Arctic region has become a New Global Common. Increasingly navigable seaways and new access to natural resources create both opportunities for greater collaboration between Arctic […]

    The New Arctic: Navigating the Realities, Possibilities, and Problems