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October 25, 2024[[link removed]]Wilson Weekly
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Pakistan's Economic Outlook: A Conversation with Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb [[link removed]]
[[link removed]]In recent weeks, a stressed Pakistani economy has shown some signs of stabilization, with decreases in inflation and improvements in foreign reserves. Pakistan's finance minister, Muhammad Aurangzeb, discusses challenges and opportunities and the status of ongoing reforms to promote sustainable growth.
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Advancing Inclusive Climate Action in Foreign Policy and Development US-Latin America Cooperation on the Global Energy Transition
This forum, held in collaboration with the White House and USAID’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance, with support from the USAID Climate Adaptation Support Activity, addresses the longstanding connections between foreign policy, environmental justice, and climate change. And it boasts an impressive line-up of experts. To explore Argentina’s role in transforming global energy use, the Wilson Center’s Latin America Energy Transition Initiative hosted Argentina’s Undersecretary of Energy Transition and Planning, its Mining Secretary, and a host of other experts in Buenos Aires to discuss battery minerals and renewable energy.
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Fall 2024Confronting Unprecedented Humanitarian Needs
A rapidly changing world is making complex humanitarian emergencies even more complicated and current responses less sustainable. Sector leaders come together to share key challenges, insights, and innovations to meet growing demands. Out now in the fall 2024 issue of the Wilson Quarterly.
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The Real Reason Putin Targets Schools? Violence Against Women in Turkey is Political: Here is Why
“Since Putin launched his full-scale invasion in February 2022, Russian forces have destroyed one of every seven schools in Ukraine. According to UNICEF, these attacks have left more than 5 million Ukrainian children with only restricted access to traditional schooling and nearly 1.9 million largely dependent on remote learning.” -Ambassador Mark A. Green President Erdoğan’s failed governance and conservative politics exacerbated criminal violence in Turkey. Women and children, the most vulnerable members of Turkish society, are bearing the brunt of his politics. Learn more from Şebnem Gümüşçü.
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NOW Logo [[link removed]]The Growing Dispute Between Canada and India: Relations at New Low
In this edition of Wilson Center NOW, Michael Kugelman, director of the Wilson Center’s South Asia Institute, and Xavier Delgado, senior program associate with the Canada Institute, discuss the latest developments in the growing diplomatic standoff between Canada and India. Troubles between the two countries began after the murder of Canadian Sikh activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar. Kugelman and Delgado examine how, “the relationship that had been on a downward trajectory for several years has now hit rock bottom.”
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The Growing Dispute Between Canada and India: Relations at New Low
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Upcoming Events
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The 2024 Canada-US Legal Symposium | Artificial Intelligence Regulation, Governance, and Liability [[link removed]]Tuesday, October 29 // 9:30 am-2:00 pm ET
After the Gulag: A History of Memory in Russia's Far North [[link removed]]Wednesday, October 30 // 3-4:00 pm ET
Between Neutrality and Solidarity: Swiss Good Offices in Afghanistan from 1979 to 1992 [[link removed]]Tuesday, October 31 // 2-3:30 pm ET
Wilson in the News
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What Happens to Hamas and Hezbollah Now That Their Leaders Have Been Killed? (New Yorker) [[link removed]]The Israeli government’s “triumphalism” may be premature given the American track record on counterterrorism in the Middle East. Find out more from Robin Wright.
India and China Reach New Border Agreement Amid Trade Talks (Foreign Policy) [[link removed]]An agreement to resume patrols in Ladakh should benefit trade ties, but it’s not a prelude to a broader detente. Read more in this week’s South Asia Brief from Michael Kugelman
Can the Multilateral Sanctions Monitoring Team Tackle North Korea’s Sanctions Evasion? (The Diplomat) [[link removed]]After Russia ended the UN Panel of Experts, a group of US allies has created their own alternative. But with China and Russia showing little interest in cooperating, progress will be difficult, writes Troy Stangarone.
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