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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. Will Foreign Policy Be a Campaign Issue in 2012?
3. Why Calling Countries "Strategically Important" Is Hurting U.S. Foreign Policy
4. What Was the Rose Revolution For? Understanding the Georgian Revolution
5. What Vanuatu's Recognition of Abkhazia Might Mean
6. What the Georgian Spy and Bomb Stories Could Mean for the U.S.
7. What Next for the U.S. in Libya?
8. We Have to Be There Because We Have to Be There - The Future of U.S. Engagement
9. U.S. Leaving Iraq with All Deliberate Speed
10. U.S. Interests and Universal Goods
11. Uncertainty and the New Middle East
12. Ukraine's Election and the Value of a Divided Electorate
13. Twenty Years After the Fall of the Berlin Wall, How We Misremember the Cold War
14. Toolbox: Georgia's Territorial Integrity
15. Thinking More than One Way on Egypt
16. The Two Futures of U.S. China Policy
17. The Tsunami, the Middle East and the U.S.
18. The Troubled U.S.-Pakistan Relationship
19. The Surge and the Speech
20. The Sum of Obama’s Foreign Policy Parts
21. The START Treaty and Partisan Politics
22. The Russian and U.S. Presidential Elections
23. The Right Question to Ask About Intervention in Libya
24. The Pitfalls of Aid
25. The Ownership Deception
26. The Impact of the Health Care Bill on Foreign Policy
27. The Illogic of the War in Afghanistan
28. The Georgian Government's Goldilocks Problem
29. The Future of Elections in Russia
30. The End of the Rose Era
31. The Deficit, Foreign Policy and Defunding USAID
32. The Arab Spring and the Future of Democracy Assistance
33. The 2012 Election and U.S. Democracy
34. Ten Years of War in Afghanistan
35. Syria and the Other Lessons from 1989
36. Syria and the Libya Intervention
37. Structural Dysfunction in Foreign Policy
38. Still Choosing between Bad and Worse in Iraq
39. Staying Relevant on Human Rights
40. Sometimes an Election is Just an Election, Not a Step in Any Direction
41. Something Is Happening and You Don’t Know What It Is. Do You, Mr. Putin?
42. Russia’s Non-Competitive Election
43. Russian Spheres of Interest and the Question of Kyrgyzstan
44. Russia Hires Proxy Flacks in D.C.: How Foreign Policy Is Getting Outsourced to Lobbyists
45. Russia and Putin in 2012
46. Romney Still Trying to Have It Both Ways on Foreign Policy
47. Richard Holbrooke and American Empire
48. Revolution and Democracy in Egypt
49. Revisiting the Assumptions Behind American Foreign Policy
50. Putin’s Diminishing Options
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