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Regime change rarely succeeds. When will the U.S. learn?

The Washington Post
In this opinion piece, Fletcher postdoctoral scholar Benjamin Denison examines how forcible regime change rarely achieves the goal of advancing U.S. interests. Denison is the author of “The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same: The Failure of Regime-Change Operations.”

Oil and Stocks Fluctuate After Iraq Airstrike

BBC
Fletcher School Professor of the Practice Rockford Weitz discusses the impact of Iran’s airstrike on U.S. military targets in Iraq on global oil flow. Weitz begins speaking around the 3:40 mark.

This Week Was About Two Silences: Deepika's and Modi's

Indiatimes.com
Fletcher student Devang Shah authors this piece on the significance of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Bollywood actress Deepika Padukone’s responses to a recent attack on unarmed students and faculty at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in India.

Sudan’s revolution runs aground in Darfur

The New Humanitarian
Fletcher’s Alex de Waal and Friedman’s Helen Young are both quoted in this article exploring why the democratic movement in Sudan, which recently overthrew President Omar al-Bashir, has not taken hold in the Darfur region.

Economics Can Still Help Solve the Climate Crisis

Energy Central
This article cites collaborative 2018 research involving A&S economist Gilbert Metcalf on the importance of collaborative climate policies across governments to help encourage and increase efforts toward mitigating global climate change.