The West’s war with ISIS, or how to dress an open fracture By: Jean Daudelin , / 30 March, 2015 Degrading ISIS won’t end the violence in the Middle East. A more fundamental change is required.
The trouble with policing the Mediterranean By: Philippe M. Frowd , / 9 March, 2015 Europe increasingly frames migration by sea as a security issue. That only makes routes more dangerous while failing to appreciate the humanitarian nature of the crisis.
An emergent zone of ambiguous rules and actors By: Saskia Sassen , / 9 January, 2015 Saskia Sassen on what to expect for global order in 2015.
On the Verge Series Contributors: Madelaine Drohan , Scott Gilmore , John McArthur , Tzeporah Berman , Saskia Sassen , Only one week into 2015, and January has proven to […]
The Korean ‘jackpot’ By: Tina Jiwon Park , / 12 December, 2014 Is reunification worth the gamble? By Tina Jiwon Park.
Nation-building in the Mideast? What is needed is a Sunni home in Mesopotamia By: Jean Daudelin , / 25 September, 2014 Jean Daudelin on why its time to reconsider the borders in the Middle East.
Could the spirit of Gandhi help resolve long-standing border tensions between China and India? By: Mosiqi Acharya , / 19 September, 2014 Mosiqi Acharya on the chances of a stronger Sino-Indian strategic partnership coming out of Xi Jinping’s visit to India.
A Border Tax Would Take Its Toll By: Danielle Goldfarb , / 22 April, 2013 Danielle Goldfarb on why even a small U.S.-Canada border fee could have big consequences.
An Agenda for the Great Lakes Region By: OpenCanada Staff , / 6 July, 2011 While he didn’t get the details right, Joel Garreau was […]