Einaudi Center for International Studies
U.S. Imports Rise in April, But Share of Goods from China Decreases
Eswar Prasad, SAP/Einaudi
“Practically every manufacturer who has relied on lean-and-mean global supply chains now is much more worried about the resilience about those supply chains,” says Eswar Prasad, professor of international trade policy and economics.
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Supreme Court Ruling Could Chill Labor Strikes
Angela Cornell, LACS
Angela Cornell, clinical professor of law, says, “Weakening the right to strike by making it riskier to exercise means it will reduce the only leverage unions have when negotiating with companies. This, of course, is a big tilt toward business interests and against the collective interests of workers.”
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How AI Is Changing the 2024 Election
Sarah Kreps, PACS
Sarah Kreps, professor of government, discusses the impact of artificial intelligence on the 2024 election.
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Op-ed: Asylum-Seekers Could Be Key to Upstate's Renewal
Alexandra Dufresne, GPV
Global Public Voices fellow Alexandra Dufresne argues that Onondaga County's emergency order banning housing and transport of NYC asylum-seekers undercuts the upstate tech industry's planned growth.
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Blinken Meets Xi as China and the U.S. Try to Rein in Tensions
Jessica Chen Weiss, EAP
Jessica Chen Weiss, professor of government, discusses the meeting between Secretary of State Antony Blinken and China's leader, Xi Jinping.
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Mandela Washington Fellows
The Einaudi Center and Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy welcomed 25 of Africa's most promising emerging public management leaders to campus in summer 2023 for a six-week leadership institute sponsored by the U.S. Department of State.
Governing the Unknown
Kaushik Basu, SAP
"Major advances in AI are raising a raft of concerns about education, work, warfare, and other risks that could destabilize human civilization," writes professor of economics Kaushik Basu. "While policy responses are urgently needed, they also must be guided by the right principles."
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To Address the Migration Crisis, State Governments Should Hire the Migrants
Stephen Yale-Loehr, Migrations
"While anti-immigrant politicians in border states are seeking to score points by manufacturing a “migrant crisis” in destination cities and states, elected officials seeking to offer welcome are far from powerless," write Cornell Law's Stephen Yale-Loehr and Jacob Hamburger.
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International Fair 2023
August 30, 2023
11:00 am
Uris Hall, Uris Hall Terrace
The annual International Fair showcases Cornell's global opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students. Explore the fair and find out about international majors and minors, language study, study abroad, funding opportunities, global internships, Cornell Global Hubs, and more.
The International Fair is sponsored by the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies and Office of Global Learning (both part of Global Cornell), with Cornell's Language Resource Center.
Register for the event on Campus Groups.
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Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies
East Asia Program
Southeast Asia Program
Latin American and Caribbean Studies
Institute for African Development
Institute for European Studies
South Asia Program
A Multibillion Dollar Bet to Make Chips in the US
Sarah Kreps, PACS
Sarah Kreps, professor of government, appears on The Big Take podcast to discuss the geopolitics and security interests in moving chip innovation forward in the United States.