Online Exclusives

Online Exclusive 05/20/2026 Online Essay

Trump’s Imperial Infantilism and Europe’s Failure of Moral Witness: What Arendt Can Teach us About Political (Im)Maturity

Online Exclusive 05/14/2026 Essay

Leverage through Complicity

The essay explores risks of the U.S. presidential pardon system, analyzing how individuals can be compelled to do bad things through complicity in wrongdoing.

Online Exclusive 04/27/2026 Online Essay

Humanitarian Aid for Minerals: Trump’s Transactional Statecraft and the Weaponization of Dependency

Framed as a pragmatic “America First” foreign policy, conditioning aid risks institutionalizing exploitative dynamics and contributing to human suffering under the guise of development cooperation.

Online Exclusive 02/10/2014 Blog

International Law and Cyberwar: A Response to The Ethics of Cyberweapons

The Tallinn Manual has been widely accepted as a generally accurate restatement of the international law governing cyber operations during an armed conflict or a ...

Online Exclusive 01/30/2014 Blog

The Ethics of Cyberweapons

How do we fit the cyber realm into an established system of ethics created to manage and mitigate the impacts of kinetic military action?

Online Exclusive 01/24/2014 Essay

Norway's Sovereign Wealth Fund and Global Justice: An Exchange

Four experts respond to Chris Armstrong's article "Sovereign Wealth Funds and Global Justice," which appeared in the Winter 2013 issue of the journal.

Online Exclusive 01/22/2014 Blog

The 2014 Carnegie Council Trans-Pacific Student Contest

Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs announces its second Trans-Pacific Student Contest, a pioneering exercise in US-Asia collaboration.

Online Exclusive 01/16/2014 Blog

Assessing the Ethics of Intervention

How should we assess the ethics of intervention? The policymaker has two initial approaches, the "morality of intentions" versus the "morality of results."