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


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January 17th, 2013

New Mexican President may be able to break cycle of drug violence

Op-ed: The San Francisco Chronicle on January 11, 2012

CISAC Postdoctoral Fellow Ben Lessing outlines how Mexico's new president, Enrique Peña Nieto, may differ significantly from his predecessor in dealing with the country's drug war. Lessing argues Peña Nieto's middle path may lay the foundation to break Mexico's cycle of violence. Read more »



January 8th, 2013

Zegart: Brennan as CIA director reflects increasing public tolerance for torture

Op-ed: The New York Times on January 7, 2013

CISAC Faculty Member Amy Zegart discusses how changing American attitudes toward torture have impacted intelligence agencies. The Obama administration's recent appointment of John Brennan to lead the CIA is a case in point. Read more »



January 7th, 2013

Eikenberry: Reassessing the American all-volunteer force

CISAC, FSI Stanford in the news: The Washington Quarterly on December 18, 2012

Karl Eikenberry, former ambassador to Afghanistan and retired U.S. Army Lieutenant General, argues that the American all-volunteer military force has had some negative consequences that warrant discussion by policymakers. Read more »



November 14th, 2012

Terrorism remains a thorn in every U.S. president's side

in the news: Foreign Policy on November 12, 2012

Martha Crenshaw outlines how every president since Jimmy Carter has had their foreign policy legacy tarnished by terrorism. Crenshaw explains that the challenge is in forming a consistent and logical counterterrorism policy, one that goes beyond ad-hoc responses to individual events. Read more »



November 13th, 2012

Climate change threatens military readiness and global security

CISAC, Shorenstein APARC in the news

The National Research Council released an 18-month study which finds that climate change, whether natural or man-made, poses a major threat to global security. Read more »



October 12th, 2012

1962 or 2012? Intelligence agencies still failing 50 years on

in the news: Foreign Policy on October 10, 2012

CISAC Faculty Member Amy Zegart outlines how 50 years after the Cuban Missile Crisis, the CIA and other intelligence agencies still operate in an organizational and psychological mindset that favors consensus and consistency. These "invisible pressures" led to intelligence failures in Cuba in 1962 and Iraq in 2002. Read more »



October 9th, 2012

CISAC names Stanford biosecurity expert as next co-director

CISAC, FSI Stanford, CHP/PCOR News

Dr. David Relman, a Stanford microbiologist and professor of infectious diseases, has been named the next CISAC co-director. An adviser to the federal government on emerging biological threats, Relman's new role will strengthen CISAC's core mission of making the world a safer place. Read more »




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