Volume 17, Issue 1: Fall 2021
The Fall 2021 Edition was published online in early 2022. See note from the editors.
Congress can bring the policy into the twenty-first century by removing the president’s sole control of nuclear weapons and eliminating U.S. land-based nuclear forces, argues Alexandra Chandler.
Diego Marroquín Bitar proposes three ways the United States and Mexico can develop a dynamic and mobile labor force.
López Obrador’s credibility and legacy will be determined by his response to the Ayotzinapa case, seven years ago. Olivia Mozdzierz explains why.
Scholars are still building a picture of life under the “caliphate“. Mathilde Becker Aarseth’s Mosul under ISIS adds to our understanding, writes Anjana Nair.
As the drumbeat for climate intervention grows louder, the world needs to decide how to govern it, argues Nicolás Esguerra.
The Organization of American States is an important forum, but something needs to change, writes Ethan D. Ayala.
Beyond the violence is a uniquely magnificent place, write Michael Henry, Will Slotznick and Mallika Sobti.
What went wrong with President Moon’s ambitious policy of engagement? Jackson’s own Eunjung Irene Oh explains.
Adityamohan Tantravahi argues the U.S. decision to engage the Taliban jeopardizes U.S. security interests. Instead, the United States should support a multi-ethnic coalition to negotiate with the Taliban itself.
By looking to Argentina, the U.S. could improve its asylum system and greatly reduce its costs, argues Liam Comer-Weaver.
Annie Crabill reviews Stephen Macekura’s 2020 book The Mismeasure of Progress, a critical history of the growth paradigm in economics.
Andrew Doris explains why analogies to peacetime garrisons understate the costs of the Afghanistan intervention.
Sheridan Gunderson explains the origins of the Israeli West Bank barrier and the art the adorns it.
Brianda Romero Castelán reviews Joanne Meyerowitz’s A War on Global Poverty, a timely addition to the literature on gender and development.