foreign Iran Crisis Pushes Foreign Policy to Top of 2020 Election Debate By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 14 Jan 2020 16:41:52 +0000 14 January 2020 Dr Lindsay Newman Senior Research Fellow, US and the Americas Programme @lindsayrsnewman LinkedIn Democrats would be wise to communicate a clear alternative to Trump’s ‘America First’ policy in the Middle East. 2020-01-14-Trump.jpg Donald Trump speaks to the media in front of the White House on Monday. Photo: Getty Images. Conventional wisdom says that foreign policy takes a backseat role in US elections. But last autumn’s Democratic primary debates suggest a potential shift is taking place in the conventional view. While healthcare dominated the discussion (Democrats attribute their 2018 midterm gains to the issue), through November foreign policy followed closely behind in second place in terms of minutes devoted to the discussion.This trend is consistent with President Donald Trump’s America First approach to foreign policy, in which an eye is always kept on how decisions abroad play for the domestic audience. One former Trump administration official has called this dynamic the ‘recoupling’ of foreign policy with domestic policy.The US–China trade conflict, which commanded headlines throughout 2019, is perhaps the best example of this recoupling, tying trade imbalances less with the geopolitical than with domestic impact on farmers. Immigration is another policy area in which Trump has linked domestic implications and indeed domestic opinion with foreign policy. It’s in the title: America First.Now, for better or worse, the targeted killing of Qassem Soleimani, Iran’s response and the subsequent fallout may make US foreign policy towards Iran and the US role in the Middle East a central issue for the 2020 US elections. As it comes just ahead of the Democratic presidential primaries, voters will be looking to the candidates to differentiate their foreign policy experience and proposals for America’s Middle East policy.To President Donald Trump, Soleimani’s assassination represents a campaign promise kept to confront Iran’s aggression.The Trump administration initially justified the action by citing intelligence of an imminent threat to US personnel and targets, but after Defense Secretary Mark Esper called this into question, Trump tweeted that ‘it doesn’t really matter because of [Soleimani’s] horrible past’. Ultimately, Trump’s message, on the campaign trail and any general debate stage he agrees to be on, is that he has overseen a new national security strategy for Iran.Soleimani’s removal from the Iranian calculus is just a part of this broader policy, which also includes neutralizing the Iranian government’s destabilizing influence in the Middle East, denying Iran and especially the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ access to funding for its malign activities, and rallying the international community against domestic human rights violations and unjust detentions.To counter Trump, Democrats and democratic presidential candidates would be best-served by offering a simple argument that too links domestic interests and foreign policy: the killing of Soleimani and Trump’s national security strategy for Iran have not made the US or its interests safer.Iran’s ballistic missile attack on US forces in Iraq, which Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called a ‘slap in the face’ for the US, makes the risks to US assets and personnel abundantly clear. Even if Iran reverts entirely to covert, proxy efforts to counter US interests, the current US–Iran tensions remain unresolved and will likely continue to persist through the 2020 elections in November.As a matter of the first order, Soleimani was replaced by his deputy Brigadier General Esmail Ghaani within a day of the former’s death, with Khamenei saying that the Quds Force will be ‘unchanged’.At the second order, Iraq’s parliament voted in favour of a nonbinding resolution to rescind the invitation to US forces, which led Trump to threaten sanctions and demands for reimbursement. Whether US troops will ultimately leave Iraq (following a ‘mistaken’ report that the US was preparing to depart) remains to be seen, but the destabilization of the US military presence in Iraq fulfils a key Iranian objective.In the interim, the US-led coalition in Iraq and Syria fighting ISIS announced that it would at least temporarily cease its counterterrorism efforts to instead fortify its outposts and prepare for Iranian retaliation, opening a wider door for the resurgence of the terror group.By arguing that the US, its troops and interest have not been made safer by Trump’s Middle East policy – from withdrawing from the Iran nuclear deal to the imposition of a ‘maximum pressure campaign’ to Soleimani’s killing – Democrats will be able to point to every post-Soleimani US injury, death, regional terrorism attack, asset compromise, cyberattack and shipping disruption as evidence.Democratic presidential candidates also ought to be explicit about how they plan to manage tensions with Iran – strategic, diplomatic and military – particularly their position on the future of the nuclear deal.Iran has made clear that the path to de-escalation is through sanctions relief. Asserting leverage need not always involve taking away all of your counterparty’s options (‘maximum pressure’). It also involves knowing what your adversary wants (sanctions relief) and showing a willingness to offer it (especially where it means less to you) in exchange for something of greater worth (avoiding war/a non-nuclear Iran).Clarity around future policy of a potential Democratic president may bring de-escalation forward in a way that Trump’s statement of Iran standing down are unlikely to do. Full Article
foreign The EU Cannot Build a Foreign Policy on Regulatory Power Alone By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 11 Feb 2020 16:33:26 +0000 11 February 2020 Alan Beattie Associate Fellow, Global Economy and Finance Programme and Europe Programme @alanbeattie LinkedIn Brussels will find its much-vaunted heft in setting standards cannot help it advance its geopolitical interests. 2020-02-11-Leyen.jpg EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks at the European Parliament in Strasbourg in February. Photo: Getty Images. There are two well-established ideas in trade. Individually, they are correct. Combined, they can lead to a conclusion that is unfortunately wrong.The first idea is that, across a range of economic sectors, the EU and the US have been engaged in a battle to have their model of regulation accepted as the global one, and that the EU is generally winning.The second is that governments can use their regulatory power to extend strategic and foreign policy influence.The conclusion would seem to be that the EU, which has for decades tried to develop a foreign policy, should be able to use its superpower status in regulation and trade to project its interests and its values abroad.That’s the theory. It’s a proposition much welcomed by EU policymakers, who know they are highly unlikely any time soon to acquire any of the tools usually required to run an effective foreign policy.The EU doesn’t have an army it can send into a shooting war, enough military or political aid to prop up or dispense of governments abroad, or a centralized intelligence service. Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has declared her outfit to be a ‘geopolitical commission’, and is casting about for any means of making that real.Through the ‘Brussels effect’ whereby European rules and standards are exported via both companies and governments, the EU has indeed won many regulatory battles with the US.Its cars, chemicals and product safety regulations are more widely adopted round the world than their American counterparts. In the absence of any coherent US offering, bar some varied state-level systems, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is the closest thing the world has to a single model for data privacy, and variants of it are being adopted by dozens of countries.The problem is this. Those parts of global economic governance where the US is dominant – particularly the dollar payments system – are highly conducive to projecting US power abroad. The extraterritorial reach of secondary sanctions, plus the widespread reliance of banks and companies worldwide on dollar funding – and hence the American financial system – means that the US can precisely target its influence.The EU can enforce trade sanctions, but not in such a powerful and discriminatory way, and it will always be outgunned by the US. Donald Trump could in effect force European companies to join in his sanctions on Iran when he pulled out of the nuclear deal, despite EU legislation designed to prevent their businesses being bullied. He can go after the chief financial officer of Huawei for allegedly breaching those sanctions.By contrast, the widespread adoption of GDPR or data protection regimes inspired by it may give the EU a warm glow of satisfaction, but it cannot be turned into a geopolitical tool in the same way.Nor, necessarily, does it particularly benefit the EU economy. Europe’s undersized tech sector seems unlikely to unduly benefit from the fact that data protection rules were written in the EU. Indeed, one common criticism of the regulations is that they entrench the power of incumbent tech giants like Google.There is a similar pattern at work in the adoption of new technologies such as artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things. In that field, the EU and its member states are also facing determined competition from China, which has been pushing its technologies and standards through forums such as the International Telecommunication Union.The EU has been attempting to write international rules for the use of AI which it hopes to be widely adopted. But again, these are a constraint on the use of new technologies largely developed by others, not the control of innovation.By contrast, China has created a vast domestic market in technologies like facial recognition and unleashed its own companies on it. The resulting surveillance kit can then be marketed to emerging market governments as part of China’s enduring foreign policy campaign to build up supporters in the developing world.If it genuinely wants to turn its economic power into geopolitical influence – and it’s not entirely clear what it would do with it if it did – the EU needs to recognize that not all forms of regulatory and trading dominance are the same.Providing public goods to the world economy is all very well. But unless they are so particular in nature that they project uniquely European values and interests, that makes the EU a supplier of useful plumbing but not a global architect of power.On the other hand, it could content itself with its position for the moment. It could recognize that not until enough hard power – guns, intelligence, money – is transferred from the member states to the centre, or until the member states start acting collectively, will the EU genuinely become a geopolitical force. Speaking loudly and carrying a stick of foam rubber is rarely a way to gain credibility in international relations.This article is part of a series of publications and roundtable discussions in the Chatham House Global Trade Policy Forum. Full Article
foreign Implications of AMLO and Bolsonaro for Mexican and Brazilian Foreign Policy By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 14 Feb 2020 10:30:01 +0000 Invitation Only Research Event 26 February 2020 - 12:15pm to 1:15pm Chatham House | 10 St James's Square | London | SW1Y 4LE Event participants Ambassador Andrés Rozental, Senior Adviser, Chatham House; Founding President, Mexican Council on Foreign RelationsDr Elena Lazarou, Associate Fellow, US and the Americas Programme, Chatham HouseChair: Dr Christopher Sabatini, Senior Research Fellow for Latin America, US and the Americas Programme, Chatham House The end of 2018 was a monumental year for Latin America’s two biggest economies. In December 2018, Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) was inaugurated as Mexico’s 58th president. The following month saw another political shift further south, as Jair Bolsonaro became Brazil’s 38th president. While sitting on opposite ends of the political spectrum, both AMLO and Bolsonaro were considered to be political outsiders and have upended the status quo through their election to office. To what extent does the election of AMLO in Mexico and Bolsonaro in Brazil represent a shift in those countries’ definitions of national interest and foreign policy priorities? How will this affect these states’ policies regarding international commitments and cooperation on issues such as human rights, environment and climate change, migration, and trade? To what extent do possible shifts reflect changing domestic opinions? Will any changes represent a long-term shift in state priorities and policies past these administrations? Department/project US and the Americas Programme, Latin America Initiative US and Americas Programme Email Full Article
foreign Webinar: US Foreign Policy in a Post COVID-19 World By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 20 Apr 2020 09:40:01 +0000 Research Event 29 April 2020 - 2:00pm to 3:00pm Event participants Tony Blinken, Senior Advisor, Biden for President; US Deputy Secretary of State, 2015 - 17In Conversation with: Sir Peter Westmacott, Associate Fellow, US and Americas Programme, Chatham House; British Ambassador to the United States, 2012 - 16Chair: Dr Leslie Vinjamuri, Director, US and Americas Programme, Chatham House The coronavirus crisis has accentuated the need for US leadership and international cooperation to address the global health emergency and economic crisis. The pandemic comes at a time of profound uncertainty over America's future role in the world, its commitments to transatlantic security, and its relationship with China. As we face the 2020 US Presidential elections, America's European partners look ahead to the potential foreign policy priorities of the next US administration. In this conversation, Tony Blinken, US Deputy Secretary of State 2015 – 17, speaks with Sir Peter Westmacott, British Ambassador to the US 2012 – 16, about the impact of COVID-19 and the 2020 US presidential elections on America’s global role. Department/project US and the Americas Programme, Chatham House US 2020 Election Series US and Americas Programme Email Full Article
foreign Europe’s Energy Union: Foreign Policy Implications for Energy Security, Climate and Competitiveness By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 30 Mar 2016 10:09:24 +0000 31 March 2016 By addressing structural divisions between member states, the Energy Union could have a beneficial effect on the EU’s capacity to conduct a unified and effective foreign policy, write Thomas Raines and Shane Tomlinson. Download PDF Thomas Raines Director, Europe Programme @TomHRaines Google Scholar Shane Tomlinson Former Senior Research Fellow, Energy, Environment and Resources, Chatham House 2016-03-31-europe-energy-union.jpg True colour satellite image of Europe at night. Photo via Getty Images. SummaryPlans for an EU-wide Energy Union are taking shape, following the European Commission’s adoption in February 2015 of a ‘Framework Strategy for a Resilient Energy Union with a Forward-Looking Climate Change Policy’. The strategy underlines the EU’s ambition to attain ‘secure, sustainable, competitive, affordable energy for every European’.The initiative seeks to transform energy markets and energy/climate policy across the EU. Its goals include cross-border coordination and integration in energy security, supply, market operations, regulation, energy efficiency, low-carbon development, and research and innovation.There is an important foreign policy aspect to the Energy Union, given the imperative of managing security and supply risks in Europe’s neighbourhood and further afield. By addressing structural divisions between member states, the Energy Union could have a marked beneficial effect on the EU’s capacity to conduct a unified and effective foreign policy.Development of the Energy Union presents abundant challenges, however. Policy and legislative changes will need to be coordinated across 28 countries. Variations in EU member states’ attitudes to security and energy policy may lead to differences in, or clashes between, priorities. The wider context is also complicated. Interrelated challenges rooted in broader policy issues include the partial transition to low-carbon energy, and concerns over competitiveness relative to other major economies.The current EU approach to energy security and infrastructure focuses on natural gas. This ‘gas first’ approach risks crowding out other responses to the energy security challenge. It could result in the creation of ‘stranded assets’, if the future gas demand on which investments are predicated does not match projections. A narrow focus on new gas infrastructure could also impede development of other dimensions of the Energy Union.The markets for coal, oil, gas and renewables are changing significantly. The shale oil and gas ‘revolution’ in the United States has altered the economics of hydrocarbon fuels, and the plunge in oil prices since mid-2014 is causing energy businesses in the EU to reassess investment plans.The EU is rapidly expanding the use of renewable energy. Dramatically falling prices for renewables will challenge traditional energy utility business models. How the Energy Union enables market access for new business models will be key to determining future energy trajectories. Department/project Europe Programme, UK-EU27 Energy Cooperation, Energy, Environment and Resources Programme Full Article
foreign UK General Election 2019: BBC-Chatham House Foreign Policy Debate By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 21 Nov 2019 17:10:02 +0000 Members Event 28 November 2019 - 10:30am to 11:30am Chatham House | 10 St James's Square | London | SW1Y 4LE Event participants Stephen Gethins, Candidate for Fife North East and Shadow Spokesperson for Foreign and Commonwealth Office (2018-19), Scottish National Party (remote)Dominic Raab, Candidate for Esher & Walton, Foreign Secretary and First Secretary of State (2019), Conservative PartyEmily Thornberry, Candidate for Islington South & Finsbury and Shadow Foreign Secretary (2016-19), Labour PartyChuka Umunna, Candidate for Cities of London & Westminster and Spokesperson for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (2019), Liberal Democrat PartyChair: Ritula Shah, The World Tonight, BBC Radio 4 As the United Kingdom prepares to go to the polls on 12 December 2019, this event, organized in conjunction with the BBC's show, The World Tonight, will give a Chatham House audience the opportunity to put their foreign policy questions to a panel of senior UK politicians. Important Information About the EventThis event is hosted in collaboration with the BBC. It will be recorded and broadcast on BBC Radio 4 – The World Tonight. Given the BBC’s commitment to due impartiality during the election period, questions will be asked to be pre-submitted via email by audience members the day before the event. The BBC will then select a balanced and diverse range of questions from those submitted. The panellists will not receive the questions in advance of the event. About the BallotDue to the expected popularity of this event, this event will be balloted. Please register your interest for the event by 11:59pm on Monday 25 November. Successful registrants – selected at random – will be notified on Tuesday 26 November and then invited to submit their questions. The BBC will contact directly those audience members whose questions they select. As priority will be given to members, we are unable to register members’ guests for this event. Event attributes E-ticket event Members Events Team Email Full Article
foreign UK General Election 2019: Foreign Policy Implications By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 02 Dec 2019 10:20:01 +0000 Members Event 11 December 2019 - 5:30pm to 6:30pm Chatham House | 10 St James's Square | London | SW1Y 4LE Event participants John Casson, Associate Fellow, Europe Programme, Chatham HouseTom Raines, Head, Europe Programme, Chatham HouseDr Yu Jie, Senior Research Fellow, Asia-Pacific Programme, Chatham HouseAntony Froggatt, Senior Research Fellow, Energy, Environment and Resource Governance, Chatham House On the eve of the UK general election, a group of senior Chatham House experts analyse a range of key foreign policy issues that will hinge on the election’s outcome. Members Events Team Email Full Article
foreign The EU Cannot Build a Foreign Policy on Regulatory Power Alone By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 11 Feb 2020 16:33:26 +0000 11 February 2020 Alan Beattie Associate Fellow, Global Economy and Finance Programme and Europe Programme @alanbeattie LinkedIn Brussels will find its much-vaunted heft in setting standards cannot help it advance its geopolitical interests. 2020-02-11-Leyen.jpg EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks at the European Parliament in Strasbourg in February. Photo: Getty Images. There are two well-established ideas in trade. Individually, they are correct. Combined, they can lead to a conclusion that is unfortunately wrong.The first idea is that, across a range of economic sectors, the EU and the US have been engaged in a battle to have their model of regulation accepted as the global one, and that the EU is generally winning.The second is that governments can use their regulatory power to extend strategic and foreign policy influence.The conclusion would seem to be that the EU, which has for decades tried to develop a foreign policy, should be able to use its superpower status in regulation and trade to project its interests and its values abroad.That’s the theory. It’s a proposition much welcomed by EU policymakers, who know they are highly unlikely any time soon to acquire any of the tools usually required to run an effective foreign policy.The EU doesn’t have an army it can send into a shooting war, enough military or political aid to prop up or dispense of governments abroad, or a centralized intelligence service. Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has declared her outfit to be a ‘geopolitical commission’, and is casting about for any means of making that real.Through the ‘Brussels effect’ whereby European rules and standards are exported via both companies and governments, the EU has indeed won many regulatory battles with the US.Its cars, chemicals and product safety regulations are more widely adopted round the world than their American counterparts. In the absence of any coherent US offering, bar some varied state-level systems, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is the closest thing the world has to a single model for data privacy, and variants of it are being adopted by dozens of countries.The problem is this. Those parts of global economic governance where the US is dominant – particularly the dollar payments system – are highly conducive to projecting US power abroad. The extraterritorial reach of secondary sanctions, plus the widespread reliance of banks and companies worldwide on dollar funding – and hence the American financial system – means that the US can precisely target its influence.The EU can enforce trade sanctions, but not in such a powerful and discriminatory way, and it will always be outgunned by the US. Donald Trump could in effect force European companies to join in his sanctions on Iran when he pulled out of the nuclear deal, despite EU legislation designed to prevent their businesses being bullied. He can go after the chief financial officer of Huawei for allegedly breaching those sanctions.By contrast, the widespread adoption of GDPR or data protection regimes inspired by it may give the EU a warm glow of satisfaction, but it cannot be turned into a geopolitical tool in the same way.Nor, necessarily, does it particularly benefit the EU economy. Europe’s undersized tech sector seems unlikely to unduly benefit from the fact that data protection rules were written in the EU. Indeed, one common criticism of the regulations is that they entrench the power of incumbent tech giants like Google.There is a similar pattern at work in the adoption of new technologies such as artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things. In that field, the EU and its member states are also facing determined competition from China, which has been pushing its technologies and standards through forums such as the International Telecommunication Union.The EU has been attempting to write international rules for the use of AI which it hopes to be widely adopted. But again, these are a constraint on the use of new technologies largely developed by others, not the control of innovation.By contrast, China has created a vast domestic market in technologies like facial recognition and unleashed its own companies on it. The resulting surveillance kit can then be marketed to emerging market governments as part of China’s enduring foreign policy campaign to build up supporters in the developing world.If it genuinely wants to turn its economic power into geopolitical influence – and it’s not entirely clear what it would do with it if it did – the EU needs to recognize that not all forms of regulatory and trading dominance are the same.Providing public goods to the world economy is all very well. But unless they are so particular in nature that they project uniquely European values and interests, that makes the EU a supplier of useful plumbing but not a global architect of power.On the other hand, it could content itself with its position for the moment. It could recognize that not until enough hard power – guns, intelligence, money – is transferred from the member states to the centre, or until the member states start acting collectively, will the EU genuinely become a geopolitical force. Speaking loudly and carrying a stick of foam rubber is rarely a way to gain credibility in international relations.This article is part of a series of publications and roundtable discussions in the Chatham House Global Trade Policy Forum. Full Article
foreign Webinar: Labour, Foreign Policy and Internationalism By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 23 Mar 2020 09:55:01 +0000 Members Event Webinar Online Event 25 March 2020 - 6:00pm to 6:45pm Event participants Lisa Nandy MP, Member of Parliament for WiganChair: Thomas Raines, Director, Europe Programme, Chatham House Labour leadership candidate, Lisa Nandy, reflects on the party's foreign policy priorities and makes the case for a foreign policy underpinned by internationalism.In recent years, the Labour party has struggled to reach cross-party consensus on its foreign policy agenda. While the current leadership election offers the party an opportunity to debate and redefine its position on issues such as immigration, security and Brexit, the extent to which Labour can reconcile its factionalism remains unclear. As Labour undergoes a process of reflection, what kind of foreign policy agenda should the party rally behind that will also appeal to voters outside of its traditional base?Can the Labour party be unified on its approach to international issues? Is an internationalist foreign policy an attractive choice for voters? And as Brexit tensions persist, what might the party's framework be to ensure new trade deals and partnerships align with fundamental Labour priorities such as workers' rights? Full Article
foreign Immigrants and WIOA Services: Comparison of Sociodemographic Characteristics of Native- and Foreign-Born Adults in the United States By www.migrationpolicy.org Published On :: Wed, 16 Dec 2015 11:31:10 -0500 As federal and state governments ramp up efforts to implement the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, these fact sheets compare key characteristics of the foreign born and the U.S. born that are relevant to understanding needs for adult education and workforce training services. The fact sheets cover the United States, the 20 states and 25 counties with the largest immigrant populations, and New York City. Full Article
foreign Foreign Fighters: Will Revoking Citizenship Mitigate the Threat? By www.migrationpolicy.org Published On :: Tue, 02 Apr 2019 11:49:38 -0400 Even with the collapse of the Islamic State's "caliphate," thousands of Western foreign fighters are estimated to remain in the Middle East. Deciding how to handle the return of the radicalized—and their dependents—is no easy issue. Some countries seek to revoke their citizenship. Yet citizenship revocation has unclear impact and raises deep questions about the limits of a state’s responsibility to its citizens, as this article explores. Full Article
foreign Leadership Visions: A Discussion with Mexican Foreign Minister Claudia Ruiz-Massieu By www.migrationpolicy.org Published On :: Mon, 30 Nov 2015 21:16:58 -0500 An MPI Leadership Visions discussion with the Foreign Minister of Mexico, Claudia Ruiz-Massieu, for her first public appearance in Washington, DC. Full Article
foreign Business as Usual? Regularizing Foreign Labor in Costa Rica By www.migrationpolicy.org Published On :: Tue, 25 Aug 2015 14:17:14 -0400 With the growing urbanization and consolidation of Nicaraguan immigrants in sectors such as construction and domestic service, Costa Rica has shifted its focus from immigration enforcement to integration. Tension has emerged between the government and private sector as a new mechanism for regularizing unauthorized immigrant workers has failed to gain traction. Full Article
foreign Leadership Visions: A Discussion with Mexican Foreign Minister Claudia Ruiz-Massieu By www.migrationpolicy.org Published On :: Tue, 15 Dec 2015 11:41:39 -0500 An MPI Leadership Visions discussion with the Foreign Minister of Mexico, Claudia Ruiz-Massieu, for her first public appearance in Washington, DC. Full Article
foreign Does Your Subconscious Think Obama Is Foreign? By www.washingtonpost.com Published On :: Mon, 13 Oct 2008 00:00:00 EDT A few years ago, psychologists Mahzarin Banaji and Thierry Devos showed the names of a number of celebrities to a group of volunteers and asked them to classify the well-known personalities as American or non-American. The list included television personality Connie Chung and tennis star Michael ... Full Article Opinions Does Your Subconscious Think Obama Is Foreign?
foreign Reducing Integration Barriers Facing Foreign-Trained Immigrants: Policy and Practice Lessons from Across the United States By www.migrationpolicy.org Published On :: Thu, 16 Feb 2017 13:11:19 -0500 Marking the release of an MPI report, researchers and practitioners on this webinar discuss brain waste among college-educated immigrants and initiatives that ease the barriers foreign-educated newcomers confront with regards to credential recognition, employment, and relicensure, as well as recent policy developments and ongoing challenges in the field. Full Article
foreign Unlocking Skills: Successful Initiatives for Integrating Foreign-Trained Immigrant Professionals By www.migrationpolicy.org Published On :: Tue, 28 Feb 2017 10:37:13 -0500 Nearly 2 million college-educated immigrants in the United States, more than half coming with academic and professional credentials, are unable to fully utilize their professional skills and instead are stuck in low-skilled work or are unemployed. This report explores a range of programs and policies that are providing cutting-edge career navigation, relicensing, gap filling, and job search assistance to remedy this brain waste. Full Article
foreign Reducing Integration Barriers Facing Foreign-Trained Immigrants: Policy and Practice Lessons from Across the United States By www.migrationpolicy.org Published On :: Tue, 28 Feb 2017 17:42:32 -0500 Marking the release of a report on the barriers foreign-trained high-skilled immigrants face in the United States, this webinar examines programs and initiatives that assist with credential recognition, employment, and relicensure, as well as recent policy developments. Discussants review recommendations for community-based organizations, employers, and policymakers to expand successful efforts aimed at preventing brain waste. Full Article
foreign Stamp duty foreign ownership surcharge / presented by Bernie Walrut, Murray Chambers. By www.catalog.slsa.sa.gov.au Published On :: Full Article
foreign Markets Committee calls for wider adoption of global code of conduct for foreign exchange markets By www.bis.org Published On :: 2020-01-30T07:00:00Z Markets Committee calls for wider adoption of global code of conduct for foreign exchange markets (Press release, 30 January 2020) Full Article
foreign Familiar to foreign By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 10:50:37 +0000 Students from OM Panama’s International Intensive School of Missions experience a different world inside a mosque in Panama City. Full Article
foreign Yield of Chest Radiography After Removal of Esophageal Foreign Bodies By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2013-04-22T05:21:48-07:00 Perforation in the setting of retained esophageal foreign body is rare, but can be catastrophic. The role of imaging in screening for injury after removal has not previously been studied.The rate of esophageal injury among children with retained esophageal foreign body is 1.3%. Intraoperative findings suggestive of injury are predictive of perforation. Routine chest radiography is not warranted in those who do not meet this criterion. (Read the full article) Full Article
foreign Fin24.com | Foreigners large net buyers By www.fin24.com Published On :: Wed, 02 Jun 2010 15:24:52 +0200 JSE: Few listings, several delistings. Full Article
foreign How Dangerous Is Your Foreign VPN? By www.pcmag.com Published On :: The US government thinks VPNs based in other countries are a threat, but the question of trustworthiness is more complicated than mere physical addresses. Senior security analyst Max Eddy tells you what you need to know about the software you use to stay safe online. Full Article
foreign Fin24.com | Tax tips for foreign buyers By www.fin24.com Published On :: Wed, 14 Apr 2010 11:24:09 +0200 Foreigners investing in South African property must consider the accompanying tax implications, an accountant has warned. Full Article
foreign Feds Say Foreign Drones Are a Security Risk, Want US-Made Fleet By www.pcmag.com Published On :: The Secretary of the Interior has signed an order that calls for the US 'domestic production capability' to build small unmanned drones. China-based DJI accused the department of imposing 'politically motivated country of origin restrictions masquerading as cybersecurity concern.' Full Article
foreign Fin24.com | Foreign funds: an investment case? By www.fin24.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Oct 2010 15:59:47 +0200 Full Article
foreign COVID-19: Bill In US Congress Over Green Cards To Foreign Doctors, Nurses By www.ndtv.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 09:06:04 +0530 Several American lawmakers have introduced a legislation in Congress to give unused green cards or permanent legal residency status to thousands of foreign nurses and doctors to meet the urgent needs... Full Article World
foreign BSNL employee union backs purchase from foreign firms, calls Indian products substandard By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-05-07T07:25:00+05:30 The union said it was unfair to direct BSNL alone to buy local 4G equipment, largely untested and of substandard quality, from inexperienced companies while letting private operators buy from global players. Full Article Industry
foreign Israel eases visa policies to attract foreign workers By www.visareporter.com Published On :: Thu, 04 Aug 2016 00:00:00 GMT To address skill shortage issues in its technology sector, Israel has planned to relax its visa regime to attract skilled foreign workers into its country. The software firms warned that skill shortages are jeopardizing the country’s multi-billion… Full Article
foreign Foreign Tourists with E-visa can Stay Up to 2 Months By www.visareporter.com Published On :: Thu, 06 Apr 2017 00:00:00 GMT Tourists coming into the country of India using the electronic permit can now stay in the country for up to 60 days, rather than the previous 30 days, and also get additional double entry bonus while tourists coming on the grounds of medical reasons… Full Article
foreign Top corporate positions in reputed Denmark firms are getting filled by foreign candidates By www.visareporter.com Published On :: Mon, 21 Oct 2013 00:00:00 GMT One out of three reputed firms is having a non-Dane at the steerage as organizations in Denmark are viewing the whole globe as their pool for notable talents. The point when Denmark's biggest organizations require a CEO, they are progressively set outside… Full Article
foreign DI tells polls that Denmark needs foreigners By www.visareporter.com Published On :: Thu, 11 Jun 2015 00:00:00 GMT As there are still ten days to go for the Denmark’s election campaign, the main issue which will be controlling the role of internationals in the workforce of Danish.The parties which are leading such as the social democrats and Venstre argue on the… Full Article
foreign Foreign secy Shringla makes dash to Kabul as US and Taliban ink peace pact today By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-02-29T07:47:00+05:30 At his meeting with NSA Mohib, Shringla reiterated India’s commitment to “stand with Afghanistan” as it pursues “sustainable peace and reconciliation." Full Article India
foreign COVID-19: New govt portal ‘Stranded in India’ can help foreign nationals return home, check how By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-04-01T17:43:00+05:30 COVID-19: The sudden spike in coronavirus cases in India forced the government to place the country in a lockdown seemingly overnight, which left several tourists stranded. Full Article Lifestyle Travel & Tourism
foreign New Visa restrictions: Suspension of all foreign visa, incoming passengers through immigration check posts extended By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-04-18T11:50:00+05:30 As the Coronavirus outbreak intensifies in India, the Ministry of Home Affairs have decided to extend the suspension of existing Indian visas given to foreign nationals. Full Article Lifestyle Travel & Tourism
foreign Coronavirus outbreak: Nepal is home away from home for some stranded foreign tourists during COVID-19 crisis By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-04-18T17:56:00+05:30 The tourists are staying like a family and the guesthouse owner has waived their expanses for one week due to the lockdown imposed in response to contain the coronavirus, leaving many tourists stranded. Full Article Lifestyle Travel & Tourism
foreign DCB Bank sees significant jump in foreign remittance services on coronavirus pandemic By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-04-16T15:50:00+05:30 "Since March 15, our volumes on outward remittance services have increased many fold. There is a significant difference in before-and-after demand since mid of March," said Praveen Kutty, Head of Retail and SME Banking, DCB Bank without quantifying the increase in demand. Full Article Banking & Finance Industry
foreign COVID-19: Legislation introduced in Congress to give Green Card to 40,000 foreign nurses, doctors By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T11:38:00+05:30 The American Hospital Association (AHA) and the American Organization for Nursing Leadership (AONL) said there has never been a more urgent need for the care that foreign-born physicians and foreign-trained nurses provide than during the current COVID-19 pandemic. Full Article World News
foreign Canada Requires Biometrics of Foreigners to Apply for Permanent Residence By www.visareporter.com Published On :: Wed, 04 Dec 2019 00:00:00 GMT Canada has opened Service centers across the country for taking biometrics related to foreign nationals who apply to stay in it.A New Approach for EfficiencyBefore December 3rd, such immigration candidates, who were applying away from Canada, needed… Full Article
foreign RBI permits Foreign investors and NRIs to buy shares of Indian cos By www.banknetindia.com Published On :: RBI permits Foreign investors and non-residents Indians to buy shares or debentures of Indian companies Full Article
foreign Foreign currency bond issues in India reaches record high By www.banknetindia.com Published On :: Foreign currency bond issues in India will reach record high in 2014: Moody's Report Full Article
foreign RBI allows foreign banks to lend in Indian rupees By www.banknetindia.com Published On :: RBI allows non-resident foreign banks to lend in Indian rupees Full Article
foreign Wyden: Mitch McConnell Wants Foreign Hackers To Help Republicans By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Sun, 11 Aug 2019 18:14:49 GMT Full Article headline government usa russia fraud cyberwar conference
foreign Foreign Office Changes Tourist Advice After Israeli Inquiry By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Wed, 24 Mar 2010 11:54:02 GMT Full Article israel passport
foreign Microsoft Refuses To Hand Over Foreign Data, Held In Contempt Of Court By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Fri, 12 Sep 2014 23:17:13 GMT Full Article headline government privacy microsoft usa data loss spyware ireland
foreign American Gets Targeted By Spy Tool Sold To Foreign Governments By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Tue, 04 Jun 2013 13:41:22 GMT Full Article headline government privacy malware usa spyware turkey
foreign Facebook Removes Foreign Interference Operations From Iran And Russia By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Fri, 14 Feb 2020 14:43:12 GMT Full Article headline government privacy russia data loss fraud cyberwar facebook iran
foreign Gulf region loosens foreign investment laws By www.fdiintelligence.com Published On :: Mon, 06 Jan 2020 10:49:06 +0000 The Gulf region is making extensive reforms to its foreign investment landscape in an effort to attract foreign investors to sectors outside oil and gas, according to a recent report by PwC. Full Article
foreign India invites foreign capital By www.fdiintelligence.com Published On :: Thu, 20 Feb 2020 10:41:47 +0000 India’s 2020 budget continues the process of opening up to overseas investment. Full Article