Peace and Foreign Policy
To build peace, we must dislodge the economic and political foundations of war. IPS believes that a just foreign policy is based on human rights, international law, and diplomacy over military intervention.
Latest Work
Iraq’s Neoliberal Constitution
The Bush administration’s shaping of the new Iraqi constitution.
The Iraq Quagmire: The Mounting Costs of War and the Case for Bringing Home the Troops
The Mounting Costs of War and the Case for Bringing Home the Troops
Executive Excess 2005
Defense contractors get more bucks for the bang.
Let Mr. Bush Explain the War to High Schoolers
President George W. Bush go on live television before a tough crowd to explain his Iraq strategy.
Atoms for Peace? — Maybe the N. Koreans Aren’t so Crazy
U.S. and North Korean negotiators have met at least 10 times, what’s next?
Bush’s Economic Invasion of Iraq
U.S. corporations march into Baghdad, at the expense of self-determination.
Iraq: Stop Intervening in the Civil War
The most important development in Iraq since the January 2005 election is the emergence of a sectarian civil war between Sunnis and Shiites.
Foreign Policy In Focus Response to Terrorism Sign-on Statement
Unleashing vengeance through overwhelming U.S. firepower will prove an ineffective and counterproductive response to this new scourge of international terrorism.
Opportunities, Risks, and the Issue of Taiwan
Contradictions in U.S.-China relations and a way forward.
August Around the World
An overview of recent developments in global security.