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Reviewing "The Myth of The Paperless Office" for the New Yorker in 2002, Malcolm Gladwell argued that if the computer had come first, and paper didn't exist, someone would have had to invent it. Paper, it turns out, is a lot more useful than we typically appreciate.
What were the original hopes and expectations of Russia’s 1991 revolution? A group of leading experts will discuss these and other questions in the context of Russia’s domestic politics, economic policies, role in the global economy and, above all, its relations with the United States.
At the NATO summit in Chicago, the much hoped-for deal between the United States and Pakistan to reopen NATO supply routes through Pakistan did not materialize. The experience of the closure and the negotiations has laid bare the changed relationship between the U.S. and Pakistan.
Reinhart and Reinhart find that economic growth is slower in the decade following a macroeconomic disruption, and extend their results to show that a faltering of economic recovery is not uncommon after a severe financial shock-although this can often be ascribed to exogenous events.
A new generation is coming to the White House;in time, the rest of us will be making critical judgments on how Barack Obama conducts business.
As the housing market struggles to keep pace with economic recovery elsewhere, homeowners would love to have a crystal ball. Absent that, however, they have AEI resident fellow Edward Pinto, one of seven panelists to be awarded with Zillow and Pulsenomics' Crystal Ball Award.
At this Bradley Lecture, Walter Russell Mead will discuss why the core institutions, ideas and expectations that shaped American life for the 60 years after the New Deal don’t work anymore.






