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  • Alan Cafruny, the Henry Platt Bristol Professor of International Affairs, is the co-author of The European Union and Global Capitalism: Origins, Development, Crisis, recently published by Palgrave Macmillan.

  • As Washington prepared for the presidential inauguration last week, students on Hamilton’s Program in Washington, D.C., settled in for the semester and began internships working on The Hill, as well as at various NGOs and lobbying groups.

  • Alan Cafruny, the Henry Platt Bristol Professor of International Relations, presented “Implications of the Trump Presidency for U.S. Foreign Policy” at the 4th annual Conference on Global Governance.

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  • Alan Cafruny, the Henry Platt Bristol Professor of International Relations, was interviewed by BBC News on what a Trump administration might look like.

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  • Alan Cafruny, the Henry Platt Bristol Professor of International Relations, presented the Jean Monnet Centre for Europe in the World Inaugural Keynote Lecture at King’s College London on Oct. 14.

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  • An opinion piece by Alan Cafruny, the Henry Platt Bristol Professor of International Relations, was published by the Valdai Discussion Club on Oct. 12.

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  • Members of Hamilton’s faculty have been called upon repeatedly in the last few months within and beyond the campus to offer their expertise and insight on a variety of issues related to the upcoming election.

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  • Chapters by Alan Cafruny, the Henry Platt Bristol Professor of International Relations, and Associate Professor of Women’s Studies Anne Lacsamana were recently published in The Palgrave Handbook of Critical International Political Economy (London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2016).

  • Alan Cafruny, the Henry Platt Bristol Professor of International Affairs, was interviewed for an article on international trade policy and the presidential election that appeared in the Norwegian newspaper Dagsavisen on Aug. 4.

  • In the late 1990s, many Latin American countries turned away from the democratization and free market economies promoted by the United States. Instead, leaders such as Hugo Chávez, Lula da Silva and Evo Morales inaugurated a new era of left-leaning social movements and policies known as the Pink Tide. Over the past five years, many have surmised that Latin America is turning away from the values of the Pink Tide. A Levitt Summer Research Group is now researching the extent to which that’s true.

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