Illuminating the Arts-Policy Nexus 
Illuminating the Arts-Policy Nexus is a fortnightly series of articles on the role of art in public policymaking. This series invites WPI fellows and project leaders as well as external practitioners to contribute pieces on how artists have led policy change and how policymakers can use creative strategies.
In Every Nation for Itself: Winners and Losers in a G-Zero World, World Policy Institute Senior Fellow Ian Bremmer illustrates a historic shift in the international system and the world economy—and an unprecedented moment of global uncertainty.
China vs. the US: The Roots of a Love-Hate Relationship (Part 1)
(The Friends of the Columbia University Libraries sponsored a December 7, 2011 lecture by Seymour Topping, Emeritus Professor of International Journalism, on "China Faces the United States From Mao in Yenan to Korea, Vietnam, and Challenges today." Professor Topping discussed how the root experiences of the Chinese leadership, which he observed in Yenan, Mao's remote
Paternostro review of Ingrid Betancourt's latest book (Virginia Quarterly Review)
In "Her Silence, Her Voice" (Virginia Quarterly Review), Silvana Paternostro reviews Ingrid Betancourt's book, Even Silence Has an End: My Six Years of Captivity in the Colombian Jungle (Penguin Press, 2010).










