Use your Facebook login and see what your friends are reading and sharing.
Transatlantic Academy
The Transatlantic Academy serves as a forum for a select group of scholars from both sides of the Atlantic and from different academic and policy disciplines to examine a single set of issues. Working together from a transatlantic and interdisciplinary perspective, Academy fellows use research, publications, and ideas to make policy-relevant contributions to policy debates facing the transatlantic community. Chosen from the fields of public policy, business administration, economics, journalism, and NGOs/civil society, Bosch Public Policy Fellows are in residence at the Transatlantic Academy from one to two months. During their fellowship, they interact with the Academy’s long-term fellows, conduct their own research, write a short paper for the Academy website, and make presentations to audiences of analysts and government officials in the Washington area.The Transatlantic Academy Paper Series presents research on a variety of transatlantic topics by staff, fellows, and partners of the Transatlantic Academy
The Global Resource Nexus: The Struggles for Land, Energy, Food, Water, and M...
This study identifies a growing number of linkages between different natural resources and elaborates on the challenges, dangers, and opportunities that will arise from the nexus of land,...
From: gmfus
China’s Long Road to a Low-Carbon Economy: An Institutional Analysis
This paper looks at the progress that China is making, or not, toward reducing carbon emissions.
From: gmfus
Transatlantic Mining Corporations in the Age of Resource Nationalism
This paper examines trends in mining and considers their implications for transatlantic mining companies and for the availability of mineral supplies in Europe and North America.
From: gmfus
From Arms Racing to “Dam Racing” in Asia
This paper warns that the struggle for water is now likely to define many inter-country relationships in Asia.
From: gmfus
The Geostrategic Implications of the Competition for Natural Resources: The T...
This paper describes the contemporary competition for natural resources.
From: gmfus
Good Cop or Bad Cop? Russian Foreign Policy in the New Putin Era
This policy brief outlines likely directions for Russia's foreign policy in the next presidential administration.
From: gmfus
Russian WTO Accession and the Geneva Agreements: Implications for Russia and ...
This paper looks at the broader consequences of the deal between Georgia and Russia to allow Russia to join the WTO.
From: gmfus
Securing Access to Critical Raw Materials: What Role for the WTO in Tackling ...
This paper outlines proposals for dealing with export restrictions on critical raw materials.
From: gmfus
Global Shift: The Challenges of Energy Interdependence and Climate Change
This paper proposes a different way to address the intertwined challenges of energy and climate change, through negotiation and joint implementation of an energy price trajectory.
From: gmfus
Europe's Veto's Power: Britain, France, the United States, and the Reform of ...
This paper argues for reforms of the UN Security Council membership.
From: gmfus
The G20, Emerging Powers, and Transatlantic Relations
This policy paper focuses on the efficiency and legitimacy of the G20, embedding emerging powers in global governance, and the implications of the G20 process for the transatlantic countr...
From: gmfus
From Down Under to Top Center: Australia, the United States, and this Century...
This paper argues that Australia will emerge as the United States' strongest ally in the Asia-Pacific region.
From: gmfus
Europe's Relations with China: Lost in Flight?
This paper explores the changing relations between China and Europe over recent years.
From: gmfus
The Atlantic Imperative in an Era of a Global Power Shift
This policy paper argues that the United States and Europe must work more closely together in order to not lose their place in the world order.
From: gmfus
Losing Control: The Transatlantic Partnership, the Developing Nations, and th...
This paper explains that the future of globalization will be less U.S.-centric and more encompassing of Chinese, Turkish, Brazilian, and other characteristics of the developing nations.
From: gmfus


