By David Dudenhoefer | Domestic Politics
SANTIAGO, Chile -- As conservative billionaire Sebastian Piñera was sworn in as Chile's 38th president on March 11, the Chilean congressional building swayed due to aftershocks from the earthquake that struck two weeks ago. The tremors were a reminder that Piñera's success as president will depend on his ability to lead an efficient recovery from the country's worst natural disaster in 50 years.
-
Britain: Foreign Policy Implications of a Conservative Victory
By Henry Kippin -
The Road Ahead for Colombia-Venezuela Relations
By Eliot Brockner -
Long Odds for South Korea's 'Swap Regime' Proposal
By Daniel McDowell -
Iraq's Elections Show Democracy's Growing Strength
By Ambassador Hamid Al-Bayati -
Choosing Stability Over Democracy in Ethiopia
By Lauren Gelfand
-
'Win-Win' Not Enough for China and Indonesia
By Prashanth Parameswaran
- Why China Drags Its Feet on UN Santions Against Iran
- U.S., China Struggle With Mid-Life Crisis
- Intolerant India
- Turkey Needs More From Ataturk's Heirs
- UN Calls for War Crimes Investigation in Burma
- Global Human Rights Report Sees Little Change
- Biden Reassures Israel on Iran, Presses for Talks With Palestinians
- In Early Tally, Tight Iraq Race Deepens Splits
From the Editors
WPR has a new home page!
Our new home page is meant to better showcase the variety of content available to WPR readers and subscribers. We hope you like it. Among other things, we highlight more columns on the front page, and we have created a new "reports" section for HTML versions of our Strategic Posture Reviews and Special Reports.
Also, you may notice a new button to the right of the search box at the top of every page. Using this button, subscribers can search across the almost 40,000 articles that have been included in the Media Roundup since July 2006. If you're not a subscriber, you can try out the Media Roundup search, and get access to all our premium content and services, by signing up for a 30-day free trial.
By Nikolas Gvosdev | U.S. Foreign Policy
If the period of time between 1991 and 2011 represents a
two-decade interregnum, it's worth examining the opportunities the United States has had during that time to fundamentally shape the
global order that emerged after the end of the Cold War, and why each
attempt hasn't "taken." The global financial crisis of 2008-2009 may have opened another such window of opportunity, but it won't last long.
A representative from World Politics Review will contact you by e-mail to set up your free trial.









