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The Harriman Institute, Columbia University, is one of the world's leading academic institutions devoted to Russian, Eurasian and East European studies. Their mission is to serve the community at the University and beyond by supporting research, instruction, and dialogue, sponsoring vibrant, multidisciplinary events that bring together our extraordinary resources of faculty, students, and alumni. They are committed to training the next generation of regional specialists to play leadership roles in setting the academic and scholarly agenda, making policy, and challenging accepted truths about how we study our rapidly changing world. https://harriman.columbia.edu/
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2. Beyond Bombs and Ballots: Dispelling Myths about Democracy Assistance
3. Democracy Bound
4. Dour Democrats
5. The End of the Rose Era
6. The Pitfalls of Aid
7. What Was the Rose Revolution For? Understanding the Georgian Revolution
8. A Fish Called Georgia
9. Changing Course on Missile Defense: Why Refusing to Pick a Fight with Moscow Is Not a Sign of Weakness
10. Continuity or Change: Obama and Democracy Assistance
11. Copenhagen, Darfur and New Perceptions of China
12. Does the UN Report on the Gaza War Accomplish Anything?
13. Eastern Europe and the Obama Administration
14. Georgia Postbellum
15. Georgia's mutiny mystery
16. Is Obama About to Make a Disastrous Mistake?
17. Maybe U.S.-Russian 'Reset' Isn't About Iran
18. No Way to Treat Our Friends: Recasting Recent U.S.-Georgian Relations
19. Obama + Afghanistan = Bush + Iraq = Johnson + Vietnam?
20. Obama's Missed Opportunity in Afghanistan
21. Obama's Unconvincing Argument That Afghanistan Is Not Vietnam
22. Russia Hires Proxy Flacks in D.C.: How Foreign Policy Is Getting Outsourced to Lobbyists
23. The Ownership Deception
24. The Troubled U.S.-Pakistan Relationship
25. The Two Futures of U.S. China Policy
26. Twenty Years After the Fall of the Berlin Wall, How We Misremember the Cold War
27. Why Calling Countries "Strategically Important" Is Hurting U.S. Foreign Policy
28. Woody Allen and America's Declining Power to Persuade
29. A Bad Week for China and the U.S.
30. A direct route to engagement
31. After the August War: A New Strategy for U.S. Engagement with Georgia
32. A Second Chance in Kyrgyzstan?
33. Change and Continuity in Global Politics
34. China Can't Have It Both Ways, but Neither Should the U.S.
35. Democracy Isn't the Only System in Crisis Now
36. Economic Cooperation's Poor Track Record
37. Engagement without Recognition: A New Strategy toward Abkhazia and Eurasia's Unrecognized States
38. Getting it Right in Iran and Ukraine
39. Hillary's Big Trip
40. Hmm. Maybe Obama Won't Change Global Opinion of the U.S. After All
41. International Responses to the Earthquake in Haiti
42. Is the Orange Revolution Over or Did It Never Happen?
43. Is U.S. Soft Power Declining Too?
44. Pakistan, Russia and Haiti
45. Russian Spheres of Interest and the Question of Kyrgyzstan
46. Staying Relevant on Human Rights
47. Still Choosing between Bad and Worse in Iraq
48. The Illogic of the War in Afghanistan
49. The Impact of the Health Care Bill on Foreign Policy
50. The START Treaty and Partisan Politics
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