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WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
| ARTICLE:
Volume XX, No 3, Fall 2003 |
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Facing a Janus
Decade
The Roman diety
Janus looked both forward and backward, as does this issue of our
journal, the first of four to mark our twentieth anniversary. Survival
itself is a condition and not a merit, yet given the mortality rate
of magazines—most perish in their first few years—it does appear
that we have found an audience. Moreover, for our staff, contributors,
and sponsoring World Policy Institute, it is justly a matter of
pride that for 20 years our pages have reflected a consistency of
purpose, tone, and scope.
The principles
announced in our founding editorial are as applicable and even more
urgently relevant to the uncertain and anxious world Americans confront
today:
World
Policy is founded on the belief that America faces new opportunities
as well as new dangers. For along with the grim realities of expanding
nuclear arsenals, deteriorating world economic conditions, and
growing turmoil are unmistakable opportunities to put our welfare
and that of other societies on a more solid footing. With Europe,
we share an interest in more independent allies that are less
reliant on American military power and more confident in attempting
to mend the scars of the past. With the Soviet Union, we share
an interest in bringing the arms race to a halt, in deescalating
tensions, and in establishing an atmosphere that allows each of
us to address ever more pressing domestic problems. With the Third
World, we share a hope for democratization, greater economic justice,
and the settling of local conflicts with the least violence, without
the intervention of the superpowers or their proxies. And with
all countries, we share an interest in reducing the role of military
power in international relations, in restructuring the world economy,
in bringing democratic collective management to trade, money and
finance, and in easing the painful process of industrialization
in the Third World and revitalization in the First.
(Signed
by our founding editors, Robert C. Johansen, Sherle R. Schwenninger,
and Jerry W. Sanders.)
It continues
to be our hope to provide a forum for young and unheard voices,
to cultivate skepticism about conventional bromides, and to aspire
to uncluttered and accessible prose—never underestimating a reader’s
intelligence, nor overestimating his or her stock of information.
That has been our lodestar under successive editors, and it is gratifying
that three of them—Sherle Schwenninger, James Chace, and Karl E.
Meyer—are represented in the pages that follow. Building on our
first 20 years, retaining the classic elegance of our facelift by
the renowned Ivan Chermayeff, and facing another Janus decade with
fresh energy and curiosity, we extend our thanks to all who have
helped make this journal possible— New School University, the advisory
board of the World Policy Institute, our own editorial board, and
our readers.
—The Editors
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