BBC News
Fletcher’s Alex de Waal provides an in-depth look at the crisis in Tigray, which is facing a man-made famine.
scroll.in
A&S assistant professor Kareem Khubchandani discusses his Critical Aunty Studies symposium, which he developed to challenge stereotypes and open up conversations about the role of the “aunty” in the family.
Tufts Now
Tufts experts collaborate on an initiative to further STEAM education capacity in Brazilian, Kenyan, and Rwandan schools
The Washington Post
A&S political scientist Kelly Greenhill discusses examples of migration events that were strategically engineered for political purposes from her book, “Weapons of Mass Migration: Forced Displacement, Coercion, and Foreign Policy.”
Nikkei Asian Review
In this opinion piece, Fletcher Dean Emeritus James Stavridis theorizes about a major war between the United States and China, analyzing the strengths and weaknesses of each side.
BBC News
Fletcher’s Alex de Waal examines the implications of declaring the atrocities occurring Tigray to be genocide.
Foreign Policy
Fletcher’s Sulmaan Wasif Khan examines how China appears to have abandoned its “grand strategy” and what that means for international relations. Khan is the author of “Haunted by Chaos: China’s Grand Strategy From Mao Zedong to Xi Jinping.”
Al Jazeera
Fletcher’s Alex de Waal writes this opinion piece about why he believes the African Union “must stand firm on Africa’s principles” against Ethiopia’s war in Tigray.
Hoover
Fletcher’s Chris Miller joins Stanford University’s “Hoover Institution Podcast” to discuss how U.S. computer chip technologies in missile guidance systems gave the U.S. an edge during the Cold War.