Carnegie Council Logo
 
SEARCH:  
   PEOPLE    ADVANCED
See Your Shopping Cart
THEMES PROGRAMS CALENDAR RESOURCES SUPPORT US ABOUT US
Print Page Mail Page
 
About Us
  Welcome
  Who We Are
  Frequently Asked Questions
  Staff Directory
  Trustees
  Newsletters
  Announcements
  Jobs and Internships
  Annual Reports
  Council History, 1914-Present
 
 
Carnegie Council Podcast
Carnegie Council RSS


eNewsletter Signup
Please enter your email address to subscribe to the Carnegie Council email newsletter.
 
 
 
Most Emailed Pages
1. Russia and Georgia: A Collision Waiting to Happen
2. The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century
3. The Resurgent Idea of World Government [Full Text]
4. The New MAD World
5. The False Dilemma of the Sweatshop
 
   
     
 

Carnegie Council Receives Funding for the Foreign Policy Roundtable

 
     
 

April 1, 2008

The Carnegie Council is pleased to announce grants from Smith Richardson Foundation, the Carnegie Corporation, and Stony Brook University co-funding the long-running Foreign Policy Roundtable. These grants complement support for the Roundtable received last year from the Richard Lounsbery Foundation.

Foreign Policy RoundtablesThe Foreign Policy Roundtable meets eight times per program year to evaluate and discuss recent publications in the field of international relations. These off-the-record discussions are directed by Carnegie Council Senior Research Associate Nicholas X. Rizopoulos and features participation of academics, policy experts, and journalists. Although attendance is by invitation only, Foreign Policy Roundtables often generate ideas that influence the direction of the Council's research agenda and public programs.

Most recent presenters include Georgetown University professor Charles A. Kupchan discussing his work on Atlantic security, and Minky Worden, Media Director of Human Rights Watch, who will offer her take on China's human rights challenges in the context of the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing.

"The Foreign Policy Roundtable is one of our most important outreach programs," said Carnegie Council president Joel H. Rosenthal. "It affords writers and editors an opportunity to engage in a candid exchange and learn from one another. This grant will allow them to consider and incorporate serious feedback on their work."

Nicholas X. Rizopoulos organizes and chairs the Carnegie Council's Foreign Policy Roundtable, which he launched over thirty years ago. He teaches and serves as the Academic Director in the Honors College at Adelphi University.

The Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs, established in 1914 by Andrew Carnegie, is an independent, nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to increasing understanding of the relationship between ethics and international affairs. The Carnegie Council's mission is to be the voice for ethics in international policy. It convenes agenda-setting forums and creates educational opportunities and information resources for a worldwide audience of teachers and students, journalists, international affairs professionals, and concerned citizens.

For more information, please contact Madeleine Lynn at mlynn@cceia.org.

Stony Brook UniversityCarnegie Corporation of New York
Smith Richardson Foundation and the Richard Lounsbery Foundation
Related Resources:


 
 

Related

Current Programs
Foreign Policy Roundtables

Topic
U.S. Foreign Policy
 
 
 

Resource Highlights

The Fall and Rise of the Islamic State
Noah Feldman
  Noah Feldman: To many, Sharia Law represents clean government. Can Islamic states succeed?
> More
> All Videos
State-Building: Governance and World Order in the 21st Century
Audio Classics
  Francis Fukuyama: We know less than we think we do about state-building.
> More
> All Audios
New from Policy Innovations Online Magazine
Policy Innovations
  Saleem H. Ali and Haris N. Hidayat on the greening of Islamic politics in Indonesia.
> More
Ethics & International Affairs
Ethics & International Affairs
  Go to the Journal for articles on ethics and foreign policy.
> More