
Author Event: Foreclosing The Future
IPS joins Teaching for Change bookstore, Busboys and Poets, and others to welcome Bruce Rich to discuss and sign his new book on “the world bank and the politics of environmental destruction.”
IPS joins Teaching for Change bookstore, Busboys and Poets, and others to welcome Bruce Rich to discuss and sign his new book on “the world bank and the politics of environmental destruction.”
An IPS and Community Cinema [DC] preview that captures the explosive emotions and complex realities behind Arizona’s headline-grabbing struggle with illegal immigration.
Thirty years after Rios Montt’s atrocities, U.S. military policy in Latin America remains a human rights disaster.
The peace movement needs to make it clear not only what we are against, but what we are for.
We need a whole new kind of foreign policy based on diplomacy rather than war.
The co-director of the Institute’s Foreign Policy In Focus project discussed the African conflict on the PBS NewsHour.
There is a growing U.S. movement linking human and environmental needs with a demand to end our wars and liberate the vast resources they consume.
Under Obama’s leadership, Washington is finally coming to terms with the world’s multipolarity.
Phyllis Bennis discusses the Israeli attack on Gaza.
Obama’s real legacy could be accepting America’s changing place in the world.
Join us for this debriefing and discussion with observers about what Venezuela’s October presidential elections mean for Venezuela, and for the U.S.
Obama will need to recast a foreign policy that has been weak or downright contradictory in standing up for the principles he himself has espoused
The final stretch of the 2012 campaign has turned into a bipartisan exercise in imperial chest-thumping.
The next administration’s top short-term challenge will undoubtedly be to end U.S. involvement in combat operations in Afghanistan.
Neither Obama nor Romney is being honest when it comes to U.S. trade with China.