News & Stories
All News & Stories
Sena invites you in for a week in her very busy life as a social policy student. From assistantships, classes, capstones, and personal life, take a glimpse at what to expect as a SIPA student!
"Without the vibrant institutionalization of many decades that underlay NATO, the MST, and the US-ROK Mutual Defense Treaty, it is nearly impossible to see why or how a nuclear sharing arrangement could seem feasible anyway," writes Richard K. Betts.
"Crafting better cyber regulations requires a better understanding of market failures," write SIPA's Jason Healey, Carina Kaplan, and Christine McNeill.
Report for the World and Columbia University (SIPA) have just launched The Path to Impact: Insights from Global Majority Newsrooms, an impact report highlighting the global impact of local journalism in Asia, Africa, Europe, and South America.
Democrats... were dejected after Republican President George W. Bush was reelected in 2004, but his popularity soon tanked and Democrats could foresee the massive wins they would notch in the 2006 midterms, said Robert Shapiro.
“This White House’s public, multi-pronged frontal assault on national institutions is unprecedented,” said Timothy Naftali.
Robert Shapiro told Newsweek: "If responses supporting this come from people from states not bordering Canada, the findings can only be taken as symbolic and as a protest—which most such responses are likely to be anyway."
America discussed the pope’s Jubilee 2025 appeal for debt relief with Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize winning economist and a professor at Columbia University.
Robert Y. Shapiro, professor of political science at Columbia University, told Newsweek the tariffs will be "very costly" to Republicans in the midterms if they lead to higher prices, unemployment or a decline in economic growth.