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Our Contributors

5617 Contributors, 82 Regular Contributors

  1. Bruce Ackerman

    Bruce Ackerman

    Writing for PS since 1998
    4 Commentaries

    Bruce Ackerman, Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science at Yale University, is the author of Revolutionary Constitutions: Charismatic Leadership and the Rule of Law (Harvard University Press, 2019), which includes an analysis of Iran’s political development throughout the past century, and We the People, a three-volume work examining the turning-points in American constitutional history over the past 250 years.

  2. Julie Beaufils

    Julie Beaufils

    Writing for PS since 2024
    1 Commentary

    Julie Beaufils is Secretary General of EuropeOn, the European Electrical Contractors Association.

  3. Titir Bhattacharya

    Titir Bhattacharya

    Writing for PS since 2024
    1 Commentary

    Titir Bhattacharya is a research fellow at the University of Warwick.

  4. María Fernanda Bozmoski

    María Fernanda Bozmoski

    Writing for PS since 2024
    1 Commentary

    María Fernanda Bozmoski is Deputy Director of the Atlantic Council’s Adrienne Arsht Latin America Center.

  5. Ian Bremmer

    Ian Bremmer

    Writing for PS since 2006
    32 Commentaries

    Ian Bremmer, Founder and President of Eurasia Group and GZERO Media, is a member of the Executive Committee of the UN High-level Advisory Body on Artificial Intelligence.

  6. Tanika Chakraborty

    Tanika Chakraborty

    Writing for PS since 2024
    1 Commentary

    Tanika Chakraborty is an associate professor at the Indian Institute of Management Calcutta.

  7. Sam Friedman

    Writing for PS since 2024
    1 Commentary

    Sam Friedman is Professor of Sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

  8. Brigitte Granville

    Brigitte Granville

    Writing for PS since 2000
    41 Commentaries

    Brigitte Granville, Professor of International Economics and Economic Policy at Queen Mary University of London, is the author of Remembering Inflation (Princeton University Press, 2013) and What Ails France? (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2021).

  9. Daniel A. Hanley

    Daniel A. Hanley

    Writing for PS since 2024
    1 Commentary

    Daniel A. Hanley is a senior legal analyst at the Open Markets Institute.

  10. Aziz Huq

    Aziz Huq

    Writing for PS since 2021
    5 Commentaries

    Aziz Huq, Professor of Law at the University of Chicago, is the author of The Collapse of Constitutional Remedies (Oxford University Press, 2021).

  11. Anatole Kaletsky

    Anatole Kaletsky

    Writing for PS since 1995
    80 Commentaries

    Anatole Kaletsky, Chief Economist and Co-Chairman of Gavekal Dragonomics, is the author of Capitalism 4.0: The Birth of a New Economy in the Aftermath of Crisis (PublicAffairs, 2011).

  12. Linguère Mously Mbaye

    Linguère Mously Mbaye

    Writing for PS since 2024
    1 Commentary

    Linguère Mously Mbaye is Principal Fragility and Resilience Officer at the African Development Bank Group.

  13. Karina Montoya

    Karina Montoya

    Writing for PS since 2023
    2 Commentaries

    Karina Montoya is a senior reporter and policy analyst at the Center for Journalism & Liberty, a program of the Open Markets Institute.

  14. Mia Amor Mottley

    Mia Amor Mottley

    Writing for PS since 2023
    4 Commentaries

    Mia Amor Mottley is Prime Minister and Finance Minister of Barbados.

  15. Soňa Muzikárová

    Soňa Muzikárová

    Writing for PS since 2021
    7 Commentaries

    Soňa Muzikárová, a non-resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and a research fellow at the European University Institute, is a former economist at the European Central Bank, a former diplomat at the OECD, and a former senior adviser to the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Slovak Republic.

  16. Aaron Reeves

    Aaron Reeves

    Writing for PS since 2024
    1 Commentary

    Aaron Reeves is Professor of Sociology and Social Policy at the University of Oxford.

  17. Tano Santos

    Tano Santos

    Writing for PS since 2019
    2 Commentaries

    Tano Santos is Professor of Finance at Columbia Business School.

  18. Laurence Tubiana

    Laurence Tubiana

    Writing for PS since 2012
    21 Commentaries

    Laurence Tubiana, a former French ambassador to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, is CEO of the European Climate Foundation and a professor at Sciences Po, Paris.

  19. Luigi Zingales

    Luigi Zingales

    Writing for PS since 2008
    29 Commentaries

    Luigi Zingales, Professor of Finance at the University of Chicago, is Co-Host of the podcast Capitalisn’t.

  20. Yair Zivan

    Yair Zivan

    Writing for PS since 2024
    1 Commentary

    Yair Zivan, a foreign policy adviser to former Israeli Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, is the editor of The Centre Must Hold: Why Centrism Is the Answer to Extremism and Polarisation (Elliott & Thompson, 2024).

  1. bremmer31_Justin SullivanGetty Images_biden Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    Biden or Plan B?

    Ian Bremmer explains the nature and stakes of the perfect political storm now consuming the Democratic Party.
  2. kaletsky78_Christopher FurlongGetty Images_keir Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

    Britain's “Change Election” Changes Nothing

    Anatole Kaletsky explains why the biggest electoral upheaval in UK history will have limited economic and political effects.
  3. ahuq4_Aaron SchwartzXinhua via Getty Images_supreme court Aaron Schwartz/Xinhua via Getty Images

    The Supreme Court Is Shaking America’s Fiscal Foundations

    Aziz Huq sounds the alarm about a dangerous trend in US constitutional law that is showing no signs of abating.
  4. roubini188_ Artur WidakNurPhoto via Getty Images_marinelepen Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images

    Would the French Far Right Moderate Once in Power?

    Nouriel Roubini holds out hope that markets and European institutions might constrain a National Rally government.
  5. palacio159_Morteza NikoubazlNurPhoto via Getty Images_election Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images

    The Global Implications of Iran’s Election

    Ana Palacio considers what a victory for the reformist candidate might mean for regional and international stability.
  6. reeves1_OLI SCARFFAFP via Getty Images_uk election OLI SCARFF/AFP via Getty Images

    No Class War From Britain’s Most Working-Class Government

    Aaron Reeves & Sam Friedman

    Labour leader Keir Starmer’s incoming cabinet has more people of working-class origin than any British cabinet that came before it, and this remarkable feature will surely bear on policymaking. However, various countervailing forces will moderate any latent impulse to veer sharply to the left.

    explain how the socioeconomic backgrounds of Labour’s cabinet members will, and will not, bear on policymaking.
  7. op_norrlof2_z_weiGetty Images_petrodollar z_wei/Getty Images

    The Decline and Fall of the Petrodollar?

    Carla Norrlöf

    If Russia, Saudi Arabia, and the world’s other large oil producers were to shift away from settling their oil trade in dollars, the implications for other commodity markets, global trade patterns, and financial stability would be enormous. But how plausible is this scenario in the foreseeable future?

    considers whether Saudi Arabia would ever move away from invoicing its oil trade in US dollars.
  8. buruma215_ Octavio JonesGetty Images_trump supporters Octavio Jones/Getty Images

    Democracy, What Democracy?

    Ian Buruma warns that Donald Trump’s supporters have a different understanding of government by the people.
  9. basu103_Ian ForsythGetty Images_polling station uk Ian Forsyth/Getty Images

    Britain’s Now-or-Never Moment

    Kaushik Basu explains why increased public infrastructure investment is needed to improve the country’s economic prospects.

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