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Warren W. Smith

Warren W. Smith

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Warren W. Smith, a broadcaster with the Tibetan Service of Radio Free Asia, is the author of Tibetan Nation: A History of Tibetan Nationalism and Sino-Tibetan Relations and co-author of the 1997 International Commission of Jurists report Tibet: Human Rights and the Rule of Law.

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  1. Showdown in Tibet

    Showdown in Tibet

    Mar 25, 2008 Warren W. Smith

  1. rodrik230_zabo69005GettyImages_swiss_army_knife zabo69005/Getty Images

    What Tariffs Can and Can’t Do

    Dani Rodrik

    When tariffs are moderate and used to complement a domestic investment agenda, they need not do much harm; they can even be useful. When they are indiscriminate and are not supported by purposeful domestic policies, they do considerable damage – most of it at home.

    argues that import duties are neither an all-purpose tool, as Donald Trump believes, nor a purposeless one.
  2. yi17_Kevin FrayerGetty Images_chinaworker Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

    Could Trump’s Tariffs Help Democratize China?

    Yi Fuxian thinks that China will have to shift its focus from running trade surpluses to strengthening the middle class.
  3. frankel168_Jabin BotsfordThe Washington Post via Getty Images_trumpmaga Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

    A Retrospective on Trump’s First Year Back

    Jeffrey Frankel

    From a stock- and bond-market crash to a military confrontation with China, there is no shortage of downside risks for 2025. But whatever disasters Donald Trump ushers in during his first year back in the White House, one should not expect his supporters to turn on him.

    imagines the economic and geopolitical consequences we might be facing in January 2026.
  4. papaconstantinou2_Frederick FlorinGettyImages_ep_flgas Frederick Florin/Getty Images

    Global Cooperation in the Age of Trump

    George Papaconstantinou & Jean Pisani-Ferry suggest how global commons and interdependencies can be managed in the absence of a responsible superpower.
  5. bremmer38_Anson_iStockGetty Images_USChina Anson_iStock/Getty Images

    Trump Will Put the US and China Back on a Collision Course

    Ian Bremmer

    Donald Trump's return to the White House will almost certainly trigger an unmanaged decoupling of the world’s most important geopolitical relationship, increasing the risk of global economic disruption and crisis. After all, Chinese leaders will be far less conciliatory than they were during his first term.

    thinks Xi Jinping's government will be less accommodative of the “Tariff Man's” demands this time around.
  6. sierakowski114_Lukas SchulzeGettyImages_orban_pis_float Lukas Schulze/Getty Images

    Viktor Orbán’s Home for Populist Fugitives

    Sławomir Sierakowski highlights the Hungarian leader’s policy of offering asylum to European politicians facing corruption charges.
  7. buruma221_DIMITAR DILKOFFAFP via Getty Images_ukrainerussiastatues Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP via Getty Images

    Ukraine’s Existential Culture War

    Ian Buruma thinks the country is justified in banning Russian art, even though it runs counter to humanist principles.
  8. prejean1_The Washington PostGettyImages_fuller_case_convicts The Washington Post/Getty Images

    An Injustice That Biden Can Still Set Right

    Helen Prejean urges the outgoing president to pardon six men who were wrongly convicted in a high-profile 1984 murder case.
  9. frolund2_John KeebleGettyImages_defense_expo John Keeble/Getty Images

    Europe Needs Shared Defense Capabilities

    Lars Frølund & Fiona Murray argue that gaining a technological edge requires focusing on collective, rather than national, interests.

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