Diplomacy and International Institutions

Experts in this Topic

Esther Brimmer

James H. Binger Senior Fellow in Global Governance

Rush Doshi

C.V. Starr Senior Fellow for Asia Studies and Director of the China Strategy Initiative

Matthew P. Goodman

Distinguished Fellow, Director of the Greenberg Center for Geoeconomic Studies, and Director of the CFR RealEcon Initiative

Jonathan E. Hillman

Senior Fellow for Geoeconomics

Ed Husain

Senior Fellow

Kenneth I. Juster

Distinguished Fellow

Shuxian Luo

Stanton Nuclear Security Fellow

Inu Manak

Fellow for Trade Policy

  • Taiwan
    Why China-Taiwan Relations Are So Tense
    Differences over Taiwan’s status have fueled rising tensions between the island and mainland. Taiwan is the likeliest potential flash point in U.S.-China relations.
  • United States
    The History and Future of U.S. Foreign Aid
    Play
    Panelists discuss the history of U.S. foreign aid and examine its effectiveness in promoting global stability, fostering economic development, and projecting U.S. soft power worldwide, as well as potential approaches for restructuring the system moving forward. **This is a virtual meeting through Zoom. Log-in information and instructions on how to participate during the question and answer portion will be provided the evening before the event to those who register. Please note the audio, video, and transcript of this virtual meeting will be posted on the CFR website. This meeting is presented by RealEcon: Reimagining American Economic Leadership, a CFR initiative of the Maurice R. Greenberg Center for Geoeconomic Studies.
  • Ukraine
    Here’s How Much Aid the United States Has Sent Ukraine
    Ten charts illustrate the extraordinary level of support the United States has provided Ukraine in its war against Russian invaders.
  • Iran
    U.S.-Iran Nuclear Diplomacy Is Stirring: Is It Serious?
    A strategically weakened Iran has sent signals it would be willing to discuss the militarization of its nuclear program with the United States, but any diplomatic breakthroughs are highly unlikely.
  • United States
    The President’s Inbox Recap: U.S. Space Policy
    The proliferation of space debris and a lack of agreed-upon rules threatens the essential benefits of space for commerce and security.
  • Foreign Aid
    Women This Week: United States Slashes All Funding for UN Agency Focused on Women and Girls Health
    Welcome to “Women Around the World: This Week,” a series that highlights noteworthy news related to women and U.S. foreign policy. This week’s post covers March 1 to March 7.
  • United States
    Leslie H. Gelb Memorial Event: Common Sense and Strategy in Foreign Policy
    Play
    Margaret MacMillan discusses how history helps us to understand the present, how the past affects the decisions nations make about their interests and strategies, and why alliances matter in a changing world order. The Leslie H. Gelb Memorial Event honors the memory of Leslie H. Gelb, CFR’s president from 1993 to 2003 and a dedicated member for forty-six years. Gelb modernized the institution to reflect the changing realities of the post-Cold War era, and was a passionate advocate of common sense and strategy in U.S. foreign policy. For those attending virtually, log-in information and instructions on how to participate during the question and answer portion will be provided the evening before the event to those who register. Please note the audio, video, and transcript of this hybrid meeting will be posted on the CFR website.
  • International Law
    Eastward, Westward
    Few Americans have done more than Jerome A. Cohen to advance the rule of law in East Asia. The founder of the study of Chinese law in the United States and a tireless advocate for human rights, Cohen has been a scholar, teacher, lawyer, and activist for more than sixty years. Moving among the United States, China, and Taiwan, he has encouraged legal reforms, promoted economic cooperation, mentored law students—including a future president of Taiwan—and brokered international crises. In this compelling, conversational memoir, Cohen recounts a dramatic life of striving for a better world from Washington, DC, to Beijing, offering vital first-hand insights from the study and practice of Sino-American relations. In the early 1960s, when Americans were not permitted to enter China, he met with émigrés in Hong Kong and interviewed them on Chinese criminal procedure. After economic reform under Deng Xiaoping, Cohen’s knowledge of Chinese law took on a new importance as foreign companies began to pursue business opportunities. Helping China develop and reconstruct its legal system, he made an influential case for the roles of Western law and lawyers. Cohen helped break political barriers in both China and Taiwan, and he was instrumental in securing the release of political prisoners in several countries. Sharing these experiences and many others, this book tells the full story of an unparalleled career bridging East and West.
  • United States
    Trump and Zelenskyy Clash in the Oval Office
    The goal of negotiating an end to the war in Ukraine just got harder.