Foreign Affairs Launches New Website

Foreign Affairs has announced the launch of a new site that will house the full contents of each of their bimonthly issues.

A third of the content from the most current pub will be free online; the rest, including the magazine’s archives will be available free to subscribers. Others will be charged a minimal fee.

According to their press release, ForeignAffairs.com is also launching several new features:

Reading Lists are prepared by experts in their field and offer supplementary material on article topics. Initial lists will include climate change, American primacy, economic sanctions, geopolitics, and modernization theory.

Postscripts allow authors to update their original articles and revisit their positions. Preliminary postscripts will cover the stalling of globalization, the closing of Guantánamo, and the use of diplomatic envoys.

Snapshots are concise, timely analyses of important events and policy issues. The first set of snapshots will explore how China’s communist party is weathering the economic crisis, and the return of the “old Middle East.”

Letters From present on-the-ground reportage from abroad. These foreign perspectives will examine topics such as labor tensions in England and South African political maneuvering.

Roundtables let experts debate major issues in free-flowing discussions. The first roundtable will be on Pakistan’s political future.

Q&A is a weekly, online conversation giving readers the chance to interact with authors directly on an article or pressing world event.

Check it out here.

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