Foreign policy experts Rebecca Lissner and Mira Rapp-Hooper paint a provocative picture of the United States’ future. As the country prepares for a presidential election of historic significance and charts its course in a post-pandemic world, they say the United States must reject the temptation to embrace nationalistic calls for closure, global disengagement or self-sufficiency, and instead redouble its commitment to international leadership, economic interdependence and alliances in an “open world.”
They say that despite considerable foreign threats, the greatest dangers to the United States come from within: decades of underinvestment in the American people, economy and democracy; misalignment of the tech sector with the nation’s vital interests; and acute partisan polarization. Come for an engaging discussion on how the future of American power in a post-COVID world must build on the foundation of 21st century competitiveness.
Rebecca Lissner
Ph.D., Assistant Professor, U.S. Naval War College; Co-Author, An Open World: How America Can Win the Contest for Twenty‑First‑Century Order
Mira Rapp-Hooper
Ph.D., Senior Fellow, Yale Law School; Co-Author, An Open World: How America Can Win the Contest for Twenty‑First‑Century Order
In Conversation with Dr. Gloria Duffy
President and CEO, The Commonwealth Club