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
Indochina
The unquiet legacy of foreign intervention still casts a long shadow over U.S. policy in Indochina.
Economic Policy Toward Africa
For 20 years the gap has been widening between the level of economic development in Africa and every other area of the world.
World Trade Organization
Today, member countries number 125 (nearly the whole world except China, some former communist countries, and a number of small nations) and WTO rules apply to over 90 percent of international trade.
Defense Conversion
What happened to the peace dividend that was widely expected to accrue from reduced defense spending after the end of the cold war?
Burundi and the Crisis in Central Africa
The international community, which failed to act when the crisis began, now faces a major challenge in Burundi and, more widely, in Central Africa.
Defense Budget and Modernization Plans
The end of the cold war sparked contentious debate about what constitutes the most effective and least expensive security policy.
Trade and Labor
A fundamental challenge facing policymakers and activists is how to set and enforce rules to protect workers from repression, exploitation, and danger.
U.S. Oil Policy in the Middle East
Securing the flow of affordable oil is a cornerstone of U.S. Middle East policy.
Haiti
Two sometimes divergent, sometimes convergent streams of U.S. policy have played an influential role in defining the economic and political system of Haiti.
Japan: Trade and Security Interdependence
Close trade and security ties bind the U.S. and Japan in a web of interdependence.