From Wilson Center <[email protected]>
Subject The Future of Afghanistan; Climate Change and Arctic Identities; Russian Permafrost
Date October 22, 2021 5:02 PM
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October 22, 2021[[link removed]]Wilson Weekly
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Hindsight Up Front: A Discussion with Former Senior Officials on U.S. Policy and the Future of Afghanistan [[link removed]]
[[link removed]]Just weeks after the completion of the U.S. military withdrawal, the Biden administration confronts major policy challenges in Taliban-led Afghanistan. Hindsight Up Front keeps you informed.
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Launch | The Mosaic Approach: A Critical Minerals Supply Chain Report Book Talk | Welp: Climate Change and Arctic Identities
“This really is a simple numbers game, we as Americans want more stuff, need more stuff to build and live in an electrified and digital economy, and because of this there’s a tidal wave of demand coming.” —Ben Steinberg “Climate change, first and foremost, is a cultural problem embedded in our connection to and use of land and water,” writes Michaela Stith, author of Welp: Climate Change and Arctic Identities .
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[link removed] [[link removed]] Blog Post | Stubborn ThingsVenezuelan Poverty, Afghan Opium, and Russian Permafrost
Read about what is keeping Ambassador Mark Green, President and CEO, Wilson Center, up at night in his latest blog.
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Fall 2021Coming Soon! Humanity In Motion: Scenes from the Human Migration Crisis
With contributions from world leaders, lawmakers, scholars and journalists, the Fall issue of the Wilson Quarterly takes a deep dive into one of the most pressing challenges in global governance today.
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NOW Logo [[link removed]]Climate Change and Nuclear War: Existential Threats on a “Split Screen”
Robert Litwak, Senior Vice President for Scholars argues the nexus between geostrategic competition and climate change must be understood and integrated in policy if the twin threats are to be averted.
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Wilson In the News
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He broke racial barriers under four Presidents and called America “the last best hope of earth,” but also admitted to failing his country in selling the Iraq War. —Robin Wright


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