Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff’s U.S. state visit cancellation is a “set-back for both nations, but ultimately Brazil will shoulder a higher cost,” writes AS/COA’s Eric Farnsworth for The New York Times’ Room for Debate.
Articles & Op-Eds
China and Mexico are moving to forge a more robust economic and political relationship, which could have important ramifications in pan-Pacific affairs, writes AS/COA’s Eric Farnsworth for China-US Focus.
President Dilma Rousseff’s indefinite postponement of her U.S. state visit will ultimately hurt Brazil more than the United States, writes AS/COA’s Christopher Sabatini for ForeignPolicy.com.
It's critical to keep and create U.S. jobs. A new report shows how immigrants help accomplish that, write AS/COA’s Jason Marczak and Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s Chief Policy Advisor John Feinblatt for NBC Latino.
Immigrants in the United States play a critical role in getting food from farms to supermarkets. The sixth in a series of AS/COA fact sheets on immigration shows how.
In World Politics Review, AS/COA's Christopher Sabatini and Wilda Escarfuller examine President Ollanta Humala's policy response towards Peru’s political volatility and social upheaval.
In World Politics Review, AS/COA's Christopher Sabatini and Wilda Escarfuller write that, as with past Peruvian presidents, “the post-Fujimori political dystopia” has befallen Ollanta Humala.