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When partnering with outside consultants to turn around a school, schools districts must consider how the work is setting schools up for long-term success.
As China grows less predictable and the United States less willing to shoulder its responsibilities, familiar patterns of bilateral relations must change.
In his April Economic Outlook, American Enterprise Institute (AEI) economist John Makin assesses the risks the world faces as a result of China’s slowing economy. With the coming transition in Chinese leadership, it is unlikely that the world's second largest economy will alter its policies to stimulate growth. As a result, the whole world may feel China's pain.
AEI's Henry Wendt Scholar Nicholas Eberstadt wins the prestigious Bradley Prize
The prelude to the G-8 summit in Saint Petersburg provides an opportunity to stand back and assess where America's foreign policy stands today and how it will meet emerging challenges from across the globe. From the rise of China to the continuing stalemate over Iran's and North Korea's nuclear programs,...
As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton heads to China this week for yearly strategic consultations, a daring bid for political asylum has highlighted the seething dissent beneath China’s surface stability.
There’s no need to be defensive; the president made a good call on bin Laden, but his courage in that instance pales next to a record that includes his embrace of American decline, his fear of American leadership, his degradation of the military (and not just the Navy, as the Romney campaign appears to think).







