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World in Focus Briefs

Research and Policy Insights from Einaudi Experts

Explore recent research publications and op-eds by our faculty. Their global perspectives help put our world in focus.

Magnus Fiskesjö recently updated the Uyghur bibliography he began in 2017. The bibliography is hosted by the Uyghur Human Rights Project, "one of the most active and well-known organizations dedicated to the issue," he says.
Bryn Rosenfeld (IES) and her coauthors explain why Putin's approval ratings "are far from a reliable indicator of popular support for the war."
"With the spring 2024 primary upon us, social scientists can draw lessons from Europe’s past. Our task is to figure out which lessons are meaningful in the current American moment," writes IES director Mabel Berezin in the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.
In this PBS video produced with Cornell's Migrations initiative, CMSP director Eric Tagliacozzo describes how trade, religion, and smuggling shaped migration trends and cultural exchange in Southeast Asia.
Esra Akcan (IES) and Iftikhar Dadi (SAP) announce the release of their new edited volume on the art and architecture of 20th-century partitions and Muslim diasporas in Europe.
Rachel Bezner Kerr recently coauthored an article, "Fields of Contestation and Contamination: Maize Seeds, Agroecology, and the (De)coloniality of Agriculture in Malawi and South Africa," in the peer-reviewed journal Elementa.
Gustavo Flores-Macías (LACS) shares lessons from Latin America in an op-ed in The Hill: "Barring candidates is unlikely to bring stability to the political system."
"Democracy has to be continually practiced and improved,” says Einaudi director Rachel Riedl in an article recently published in the peer-reviewed journal World Politics. Read coverage of findings from our democratic threats team.
Mostafa Minawi has received the Middle East Studies Association's Albert Hourani Book Award for "Losing Istanbul: Arab-Ottoman Imperialists and the End of Empire."
Jamaican poet Ishion Hutchinson contributes to Einaudi's inequalities, identities, and justice global research priority. "I can hear a poem before it arrives," he says in this Guardian interview.