Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Center for International Security and Cooperation Stanford University


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September 21st, 2012

Understanding the evolution of China's modern military strategy

in the news: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists on September 19, 2012

CISAC Faculty Member John Lewis and Researcher Xue Litai published an article in the September/October 2012 issue of Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists which examines the complex history of China's defense strategy. The two China scholars outline the forces that have shaped Beijing's conventional and nuclear military posture.




February 29th, 2012

Stanford’s Straub, Hecker explain North Korea’s plan to halt nuclear program

CISAC, FSI Stanford, Shorenstein APARC News

In an agreement with Washington, Pyongyang will allow nuclear inspectors into North Korea and also receive much-needed nutritional assistance to the impoverished country. David Straub and Siegfried Hecker discuss Pyongyang’s moratorium on nuclear testing. Read more »



February 16th, 2012

Q&A: Fingar shares insight on Chinese vice president's U.S. visit

Shorenstein APARC, CISAC, FSI Stanford, SCP in the news: Shanghai Oriental Morning Post on February 16, 2012

Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping recently visited the United States to meet with top officials and tour various cities. China experts followed the trip closely because Xi is anticipated to become China’s next president. Thomas Fingar spoke with the Shanghai Oriental Morning Post about the visit, and about the Obama administration's Asia policy. Read more »



September 6th, 2011

Karl Eikenberry joins Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies

CISAC, FSI Stanford, CDDRL Press Release

The Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies at Stanford University is pleased to welcome Karl Eikenberry as the 2011 Payne Distinguished Lecturer. Read more »



August 24th, 2011

As Tripoli falls, a political scientist says a difficult road lies ahead

CISAC, FSI Stanford in the news

As events unfold in Tripoli, the world is asking what to expect next. James Fearon, a political scientist whose research focuses on political violence, ethnic conflict, and the impact of democracy on foreign policy, says a post-Gaddafi Libya looks like a vacuum in terms of civil society and competent state institutions -- and such vacuums, he says, "are usually very dangerous." Read more »



July 18th, 2011

Siegfried Hecker: How scientists can contribute to nuclear security

CISAC, FSI Stanford in the news: Physics Today on July 1, 2011

Writing in Physics Today, Siegfried Hecker gives a firsthand perspective on the role scientists can play in reducing nuclear danger.




December 7th, 2010

The ethics of the draft

CISAC, FSI Stanford News

Who should fight? It is no idle question in an era in which thousands of U.S. troops are fighting and dying in Afghanistan and Iraq to protect Americans back home. In fact, the answer has profound consequences for the way policymakers make decisions about how these wars are waged. On Dec. 2, scholars from Stanford, the University of Chicago, and the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University examined this issue as part of the Ethics and War series, co-sponsored by the Center for International Security and Cooperation. Their conclusion: there is a wide and troubling divide between the 2.4 million Americans who volunteer to serve in the military and the many millions more who choose not to. +VIDEO+ +AUDIO+ Audio & Video transcripts available +PDF+ flyer available
Read more »




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