Foreign_Affairs_Sentyabr-Oktyabr_2018.pdf

(34963 KB) Pobierz
AMERICA’S UNCONSTRAINED PRESIDENCY
SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2018
september/october 2018 • volume 97 • number 5 •
world war web
The Fight
for the
Internet’s
Future
F O R E I G N A F F A I R S .C O M
PRINCIPLED
DECISIVE
VERSATILE
TRANSITION FROM YOUR LIFE IN SPECIAL OPERATIONS TO
PARAMILITARY OPERATIONS WITH THE CIA.
With your special operations training, you’ve proven that you’ll
push yourself to the limit in defending what makes our country great.
Now, we’re inviting you to go beyond – to serve our nation’s interests
as a Paramilitary Operations Officer or Specialized Skills Officer with the
CIA’s Directorate of Operations. You’ll conduct intelligence activities
globally using your significant combat and leadership experience in Special
Operations or Combat Arms (Infantry and Aviation).
Every company has a mission statement. Some are just more
meaningful than others.
Successful candidates for this position
may be eligible for a one-time hiring bonus
of up to 25% of their base pay.
For additional information and to apply, visit:
THE WORK OF A NATION.
THE CENTER OF INTELLIGENCE.
cia.gov/careers
Applicants must have US citizenship and the ability to successfully complete medical examinations and security
procedures, including a polygraph interview.
An equal opportunity employer and a drug-free workforce.
Volume 97, Number 5
WORLD WAR WEB
When China Rules the Web
10
Technology in Service of the State
Adam Segal
Data to the People
19
India’s Inclusive Internet
Nandan Nilekani
Regulate to Liberate
28
Can Europe Save the Internet?
Helen Dixon
The Internet’s Lost Promise
33
And How America Can Restore It
Karen Kornbluh
Battlefield Internet
40
A Plan for Securing Cyberspace
Michèle Flournoy and Michael Sulmeyer
A Big Choice for Big Tech
COVE R: BEN WIS EMAN
48
Share Data or Suffer the Consequences
Viktor Mayer-Schönberger and Thomas Ramge
September/October 2018
CONFLICT RESOLUTION
|
ECONOMY & TRADE
IMMIGRATION
|
ANTIRACIST STUDIES
|
URBAN ECOLOGY
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
|
TRANSNATIONAL SECURITY
TRADE POLICY
|
POLITICAL VIOLENCE
PEACE BUILDING
|
NATIONAL SECURITY
|
DIPLOMACY
SOCIAL ISSUES
|
TECHNOLOGY
INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS
|
REGIONAL SECURITY & STABILITY
CLIMATE CHANGE
|
GLOBAL INEQUALITY
MAKE A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE
POLITICAL ECONOMY
|
EUROPE & EURASIA
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
|
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
THE MIDDLE EAST
|
WORLD ORDER
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
|
SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS
NATIONALISM
|
TRADE RELATIONS
FOOD & AGRICULTURE
|
RECONCILIATION & JUSTICE
ETHICS, PEACE & HUMAN RIGHTS
FIELD EXPERIENCE
|
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
CYBERSECURITY
|
ISLAMIC STUDIES
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
|
POLITICAL THOUGHT
At the School of International Service, we’re guided by an important
principle: we need the world, and it needs us. Join our top-10 school
of international affairs and turn your passion for challenging the
status quo into a career of global leadership and service.
Learn more at
www.american.edu/sis
ESSAYS
Against Identity Politics
90
The New Tribalism and the Crisis of Democracy
Francis Fukuyama
The New Arab Order
116
Power and Violence in Today’s Middle East
Marc Lynch
Three Cheers for Trump’s Foreign Policy
133
What the Establishment Misses
Randy Schweller
The Unconstrained Presidency
Checks and Balances Eroded Long Before Trump
James Goldgeier and Elizabeth N. Saunders
Can Mexico Be Saved?
144
The Peril and Promise of López Obrador
Denise Dresser
China’s Future is South Korea’s Present
157
Why Liberalization Will Follow Stagnation
Hahm Chaibong
How We Got the Iran Deal
117
And Why We’ll Miss It
Wendy R. Sherman
186
ON FOREIGNAFFAIRS.COM
Philip Zelikow
on how
to diplomatically
engage North Korea.
Alison Carnegie
on
why Trump’s trade
threats won’t work.
Arvind Panagariya
on four years of
“Modinomics.”
September/October 2018
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin