News

Government professor G. John Ikenberry, one of the country’s leading experts on international relations and American foreign policy in the post-Cold War era, will leave Georgetown in July after ...
G. John Ikenberry is a professor of politics and international affairs at Princeton University, a global eminence scholar at Kyung Hee University, and the author of A World Safe for Democracy ...
Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service inaugurated Dr. G. John Ikenberry as the first Peter F. Krogh Professor of Geopolitics and Justice in World Affairs Oct. 2. Dr. Peter Krogh, for ...
In the first, Daniel Deudney and G. John Ikenberry dispute my argument that the authoritarian capitalist great powers Germany and Japan were defeated in both world wars largely because of contingent ...
G. John Ikenberry asks whether China will buy into the prevailing liberal, rule-based international order, which has been promoted and underwritten by the United States ("The Future of the Liberal ...
Why does John Ikenberry think the sorrows of liberal internationalism are temporary? A politics based on the rule of law and the rights of individuals at home has rarely translated into the same ...
This week, Jim sat down with John Ikenberry, the Albert G. Milbank Professor of politics and international affairs at Princeton University, to discuss the case for liberal internationalism.
G. John Ikenberry sits down with James M. Lindsay to discuss whether liberal internationalism and U.S. global leadership are fit for purpose in the twenty-first century. This episode is the second ...
Is it a feeble myth, as Graham Allison has suggested in Foreign Affairs? Or, as G. John Ikenberry and others have argued, is it a powerful influence on state behavior?</p><p> </p> ...
Book review: G. John Ikenberry A World Safe for Democracy: Liberal Internationalism and the Crises of Global Order (Yale University Press, 2020) Big ideas about how the world works, and how it should ...
Documenting the demise of the liberal international order has become a growth industry in the foreign policy sector. In a terrific new book, “A World Safe for Democracy,” G. John Ikenberry ...
The article’s authors, Daniel Deudney and G. John Ikenberry, fire broadsides at what they call a profoundly deficient “understanding of the wellsprings of American success in the twentieth ...