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Foreign Policy Discussion Group

  • 118 Church Street LaGrange, GA 30240 United States (map)

The Foreign Policy Discussion Group is a non-partisan, 8-week lecture-and-learn discussion series produced by the Foreign Policy Association’s Great Decisions Series. For eight weeks through the Spring we will meet every Thursday at 6pm in the Grand Salon at Pretty Good Books to engage and discuss thorny issues of international importance.

The one-time $35 registration fee gives you access to the Great Decisions 2024 booklet with a bevy of articles written by subject matter experts as well as an online lecture series and supplemental materials designed to inform group participation and inspire discussion. You can register on our website (https://www.prettygoodbooks.net/products/foreign-policy-discussion-group) or in-store.

The discussions are fascinating, challenging, and informative in equal-measure. We hope you’ll join us!


Mideast Realignment

By Marc Lynch
The United States and Middle East are at a crossroads. In spite of a reduced presence in the Middle East, the U.S. still has significant national interests there and the area is a key arena for global power politics. Can the U.S. continue to defend its interests in the Middle East and globally with a lower level of military and political involvement, or should it recommit to a leading role in the region?

 

Climate technology and competition

By Bud Ward
Will the United States and China, with other powerful countries following suit, approach current and future climate initiatives with an increased commitment to trade protectionism and nationalism, by various measures including trade restrictions? Or could a growing spirit of international accord develop to confront the “common enemy” of climate change?

 

Science across borders

By Mila Rosenthal

Scientific advances benefit from collaboration between researchers, but what happens when material, such as Artificial Intelligence (AI) is controversial and important to a nation’s national security? Is there a middle ground between sharing information and denying access? How can we regulate cooperation?

 

U.S. -China trade rivalry

By Jonathan Chanis

China’s economic rise and its current policies of increasing the role of the state in the economy have led some U.S. policymakers to seek to deny China access to U.S. technology and investment. This is seen as a necessary corrective to decades of predatory Chinese economic policies. Is this a wise strategy, and how effective can it be?

 

NATO’s future

By Sarwar Kashmeri

Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has come under increased scrutiny, not because NATO troops are involved in the conflict, but because of its role in relations between Russia and its neighbors. Will expanding membership in NATO protect countries, or will it further provoke Russia?

 

Understanding Indonesia

By Charles Sullivan

Despite its large size, Indonesia remains virtually invisible to most Americans. But as one of the world’s largest democracies, the world’s largest Muslim-majority nation, and as an economic driver of ASEAN, why does it fly below the radar? What are current issues in U.S.-Indonesian relations, and what role can the country play in Asia?

 

High Seas Treaty

By FPA editors

Areas of the seas beyond national jurisdiction comprise the high seas, which are facing a degradation of ecosystems due to climate change and the increase in human activities, such as shipping, overfishing, pollution, and deep-sea mining. The recently negotiated High Seas Treaty, also known as the Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction treaty, will attempt to address these issues. How difficult will it be to convince nations to participate?

 

Pandemic preparedness

By Carolyn Reynolds

 Looking back at the covid-19 pandemic, there are many lessons to take away in terms of domestic and international policies. Although this pandemic seems to have waned, how can we apply these lessons to future pandemics? Will countries cooperate, and will a consensus emerge on how to manage global health challenges?