Leveraging national surveys, big-data advances and machine learning, Cornell researchers have piloted a new approach to ...
The old rules of inviolable state borders don’t apply in a world of trade wars and terrorist regimes.
Global leaders, chief executives and lawmakers are navigating whipsaw changes touching healthcare, schools and the global ...
Maps are ubiquitous—on phones, in-flight and car displays, and in textbooks the world over. While some maps delineate and ...
Depending on how old you are, you might remember having to pull out a paper map to find your way around a place. Back then, ...
The arrest of President Yoon Suk Yeol and ongoing political turmoil over the fallout from his botched Dec. 3 martial law declaration have sparked mixed reactions from the foreign resident community.
Donald J. Trump was sworn in as the 47th president at a ceremony in the Capitol Rotunda, declaring that the "the golden age of America begins right now." Late today, he appeared at a parade in the ...
And one would expect that the relationship between political science and public administration discourse will reflect this inseparability. Unfortunately, it does not. The separation undermines the ...
“It’s one of the oldest truisms in politics,” said Larry Gerston, a San José State political science professor ... everyone was all excited about the World Wide Web, it was still a thing ...
which has the world’s largest standing army and spends 11 times more on defence than Taiwan, CNN reported. Public sentiment in Taiwan reflects growing anxiety over the political deadlock. Residents ...
The Trump administration plans to rejoin an international anti-abortion pact alongside countries such as Uganda, Saudi Arabia and Belarus, taking its first formal step to roll back Biden-era ...