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FOREIGNAFFAIRS
Volume 95, Number 2
O SURVIVE SLOW GROWTH
The Age of Secular Stagnation
2
What It Is and What to Do About It
Lawrence H. Summers
Can Central Banks Goose Growth?
10
Bold Action Is Needed to Fight the Next DownturnJ. Tomilson Hill and lan Morris
The Demographics of Stagnation
18
Why People Matter for Economic GrowthRuchir Sharma
Middle-Class Heroes
25
The Best Guarantee of Good GovernanceNancy Birdsall
Eurasia's Coming Anarchy
33
The Risks of Chinese and Russian WeaknessRobert D. Kaplan
Is Innovation Over?
42
The Case Against PessimismTyler Cowen
March/April 2016
Kelly Greenhill ondemographic bombing.
Michael Kazin onDonald Trump.
A Michael Levi on thegeopolitics of cheap gas.
Learning to Love Stagnation 47
Growth Isn't Everything—Just Ask JapanZachary Karabell
The Good News From Google 54
A Conversation With Ruth Porat
ESSAYS
Fight or Flight
62
America's Choice in the Middle EastKenneth M. Pollack
ISIS Goes Global
76
Fight the Islamic State by Targeting Its AffiliatesDaniel Byman
Can China's Companies Conquer the World?
86
The Overlooked Importance of Corporate PowerPankaj Ghemawat and Thomas Hout
The Lost Art of Economic Statecraft
99
Restoring an American TraditionRobert D. Blackwill and Jennifer M. Harris
The Study-Abroad Solution
111
How to Open the American MindSanford J. Ungar
March/April 2016
Japan's New Realism
125Abe Gets ToughMichael Auslin
The Next Front on Climate Change
135How to Avoid a Dimmer, Drier WorldVeerabhadran Ramanathan, Jessica Seddon, and David G. Victor
REVIEWS & RESPONSES
What Rome Can Teach Us Today
144Ancient Lessons for Modern PoliticsMichael Fontaine
Hunger Games
150A History of FamineDouglas Gollin
Diplomacy Disrupted
156Foreign Policy in a Decentralized WorldCameron Munter
A Feminist Foreign Policy
162Hillary Clinton's Hard ChoicesSuzanne Nossel
Recent Books 168
Letters to the Editor 192
"Foreign Affairs . will tolerate wide differences of opinion. lis articles will not represent any consensosof beliefs. What is demanded of them is that they shall be cornpetent and well informed, representing honestopinions seriously held and convincingly expressed. . . It does not accept responsibility for the views in anyarticles, signed or unsigned, which appear in its pages. What it does accept is the responsibility for givingthem a chance to appear."
Archibald Cary Coolidge, Founding EditorVolume 1, Number 1 • September 1922
March/April 2016