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Our curated library is packed full of knowledge, know-how and best practices in the fields of democracy and culture.

Read the latest on the Russian invasion of Ukraine and other critical world events in our library of democratic content.  Gathered from trusted international sources, the curated library brings you a rich resource of articles, opinion pieces and more on democracy and culture to keep you updated.

 

 

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International Institutions Still Matter to the US

“With less preponderance and facing a more complex world, the United States must exercise power with as well as over others, and use its soft power to attract their cooperation. To do that, the US will have to rediscover the importance of the institutions Donald Trump's administration abandoned” (Joseph S. Nye, Jr., 2020).

9 November 2020
Joseph R. Nye
Project Syndicate

Covid has made the state’s hand more visible but there are risks

“In the pandemic, the invisible hand of the market is giving way to the visible hand of state. The big question is not whether the state will be back, but what form its presence will take” (Beata Javorcik, 2020).

9 November 2020
Beata Javorcik
FT

Biden Can’t Be F.D.R. He Could Still Be L.B.J.

“President-elect Joe Biden intuited that legions of Americans wanted a return to normal — a restoration, a reversion. The earnest hope in his promise “to restore the soul of America” was that the same country that uplifted Donald Trump and let itself be consumed by internet-fueled culture wars could heed its better angels again” (Anand Giridharadas, 2020).

9 November 2020
Anand Giridharadas
NYT

Joe Biden and the New Art of World Leadership

“The contrast with Trumpism will quickly become apparent in Mr Biden’s approach to leadership, allies and engagement with international institutions. Writing in Foreign Affairs earlier this year, Mr Biden insisted that ‘America must lead again,” and that his foreign-policy agenda would “place the United States back at the head of the table’” (The Economist, 2020).

8 November 2020
unsigned
The Economist

Joe Biden Won’t Fix America’s Relationships

The author explores after the election of Joseph Biden to the U.S. Presidency how “Serious questions about America’s role in the world will not go away just because Donald Trump was defeated” (Tom McTague, 2020).

7 November 2020
Tom McTague
The Atlantic

What COVID‑19 Reveals About Twenty‑First Century Capitalism: Adversity and Opportunity

“Twenty-first century capitalism features financialization and monopoly power. A structural perspective of contemporary political economy illuminates how these aspects shape the COVID-19 response...examining access to medicines, personal protective equipment and vaccines, inequality and working conditions highlights just some of what is broken and what needs to be fixed” (Susan K. Sell, 2020).

6 November 2020
Susan K. Sell
Development Journal

Why social media can’t keep moderating content in the shadows

“Online platforms aren’t transparent about their decisions—which leaves them open to claims of censorship and masks the true costs of misinformation” (Joan Donovan, 2020).

6 November 2020
Joan Donovan
MIT Tech Review

America’s Next Authoritarian Will Be Much More Competent

“From an international perspective,...Trump is just one more example of the many populists on the right who have risen to power around the world...these people win elections but subvert democratic norms: by criminalizing dissent, suppressing or demonizing the media, harassing the opposition, and deploying extra-legal mechanisms whenever possible” (Zeynep Tufekci, 2020).

6 November 2020
Zeynep Tufecki
The Atlantic

American Democracy Survives Its Brush With Death

“Looking at the bigger picture, Democrats were done in by extreme voices that Mr. Trump was able to link to their party. Defunding the police will never be popular outside a few lefty precincts. The whiff of socialism helped kill Democrats in Florida” (Timothy Egan, 2020).

6 November 2020
Timothy Egan
NYT

2020 Should Be the Last Time We Vote Like This

“The process of registering your democratic preference, the citizen’s core duty in a democracy. Can we take a moment to acknowledge how terribly inefficient, inaccessible, unfair and just plain backward this process remains in the United States?” (Farhad Manjoo, 2020).

4 November 2020
Farhad Manjoo
NYT
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