: Peace Channel Peace Channel...
A partnership between Foreign Policy and the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at the Harvard Kennedy School, the Peace Channel is FP’s home for cutting-edge analysis and reporting on international conflict prevention and resolution. The Peace Channel’s authors examine what’s driving the world’s most vexing challenges and explore new ways to resolve the conflicts that threaten lives, livelihoods, and human dignity.
The United States has outsourced its foreign policy to regional allies. In South Korea, it might lead to peace — in Israel, it’s more likely leading to war.
Unless the United States changes its priorities, Korean diplomacy is probably doomed.
The United Nations needs to accept that it's possible to fight and broker peace agreements at the same time.
Trump’s plan for Israeli-Palestinian peace is fanciful, dangerous, and not going anywhere.
U.S. officials failed to mention the impending recognition of the holy city as Israel's capital just days before Trump's announcement.
But the Trump administration needs to walk a very fine line with Palestine and Arab states.
There’s no way to ever win against the Taliban if the heroin trade is left to flourish.
There's absolutely no reason to close down the path to peace in Afghanistan.
Government control in Damascus, floods in Mogadishu, and tattoos in Tokyo.
Ramadan around the world, violence in Gaza, and an eruption in Hawaii.
Should Brazil keep its Amazon tribes from taking the lives of their children?
Family reunification for refugees is no longer a given. But keeping relatives apart hurts host countries as well as newcomers.
The best-selling psychologist isn't leading young men to salvation — he's delivering them to authoritarianism.
What Tunisia can teach its neighbors about the value of education.