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Nicholas Mulder, IES/GPV
On the Money Talks podcast, Nicholas Mulder, assistant professor of history, explains historically how long it has taken for sanctions to have an...
Eswar Prasad, SAP
Eswar Prasad, professor of applied economics and policy, says, “It’s a market for certain U.S. exports, such as agricultural products, but also,...
Mostafa Minawi, IES/CO+POS
Mostafa Minawi, associate professor of history, says that the current climate in Turkey “might be economic and political, but the tools are cultural...
Barry Strauss, PACS
Barry Strauss, professor in history and classics and former PACS director, weighs in on leadership during Rome's Imperial Period and eventual decline...
Alexis Fintland, Migrations Scholar
Alexis Fintland, a 2022 graduate of the ILR School and a first-generation Cuban American, discusses her student experience and more in this Q&A...
Sarah Kreps, PACS
Sarah Kreps, professor of government and public policy, says, “The Chinese media has been so anti-US that it has created … a difficult environment now...
Jessica Chen Weiss, EAP
This piece quotes a 2020 Foreign Affairs article written by political scientist Jessica Chen Weiss. "Once mobilized, nationalism creates pressure for...
Lourdes Casanova, Global Public Voices and LACS
Lourdes Casanova, director of the Emerging Markets Institute and senior lecturer of management, says "Taiwan-based TSMC is the biggest world producer...
Sarah Kreps, PACS
Sarah Kreps, professor and director of the Cornell Tech Policy Lab, says China semiconductor chip imports, including from Taiwan, "have become almost...
Nicholas Mulder, IES
“While the use of sanctions has surged, their odds of success have plummeted,” says Nicholas Mulder, assistant professor of history, in his book “The...