The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace generates strategic ideas and independent analysis, supports diplomacy, and trains the next generation of scholar-practitioners to help countries and institutions take on the most difficult global problems and advance peace.
Our scholars generate strategic ideas and independent analysis to help inform countries, institutions, and leaders as they take on the most difficult global problems.
Our scholars from around the world provide decisionmakers with pragmatic recommendations to support viable long-term solutions to global challenges.
Carnegie leverages data to understand the threats and opportunities affecting global security and well-being.
Explore Sheena Chestnut Greitens, Isaac Kardon, and Cameron Waltz’spaper "China’s Foreign Police Training: A Global Footprint."
Carnegie scholars provide topical analysis on democracy, technology, climate, and other issues within the regional context in Asia, Africa, Europe, East and South Asia, the Middle East, Russia and Eurasia, the United States, and Latin America.
Carnegie’s regular series of global public events, both virtual and in person, bring together top experts to discuss and debate pressing threats to global security and provide solutions.
Discover what’s driving today’s hottest global issues with Carnegie Explainers.
With expert insights and rich visuals, our scholars bring clarity to complex foreign policy issues, providing a deeper understanding of critical geopolitical challenges.
China has unveiled its full nuclear triad for the first time—land, sea, and air-based systems. With its arsenal rapidly expanding, what does this mean for global security and the future of arms control?
A research team from the Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace presents new work on China’s evolving role in global security.
Civic space in the U.S. is shrinking—but global movements offer a roadmap for resistance. From Uganda to Nigeria, activists have pushed back against threats to protests, nonprofits, and free speech. What can U.S. civil society learn from their success?
Discover what’s driving today’s hottest global issues with Carnegie Explainers.
With expert insights and rich visuals, our scholars bring clarity to complex foreign policy issues, providing a deeper understanding of critical geopolitical challenges.
China has unveiled its full nuclear triad for the first time—land, sea, and air-based systems. With its arsenal rapidly expanding, what does this mean for global security and the future of arms control?
A research team from the Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace presents new work on China’s evolving role in global security.
Civic space in the U.S. is shrinking—but global movements offer a roadmap for resistance. From Uganda to Nigeria, activists have pushed back against threats to protests, nonprofits, and free speech. What can U.S. civil society learn from their success?