

The Fletcher Forum Podcast
The Fletcher Forum
Founded in 1975 and published biannually, The Fletcher Forum of World Affairs is the student-managed foreign policy journal at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. The publication provides a broad, interdisciplinary platform for analysis of legal, political, economic, environmental, and diplomatic issues in international affairs. The Fletcher Forum podcast will serve as another avenue for The Fletcher Forum and will feature interviews, roundtable discussions, and debates centered around the latest in international affairs.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 7, 2024 • 45min
How can we all trade in 2024?: The Remaking Trade Project
Pf. Joel Trachtman joins the Fletcher Forum Podcast to discuss his work on the Remaking Trade Project. The project aims to reimagine international trade policy for the 21st century and outline how it can contribute to a sustainable future. Pf. Trachtman is the Henry J. Baker Professor of Commercial Law at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, and recently returned from a stint at the College of Europe. He has published numerous works including "Advanced Introduction to International Trade Law" (Elgar 2020), "Collected Essays: Trade Law, Domestic Regulation, and Development" (World Scientific 2015), "The Future of International Law: Global Government" (Cambridge 2013), and "The Tools of Argument" (Createspace 2013)." Find out more here: https://remakingtradeproject.org/

Oct 26, 2024 • 48min
U.S. Elections from an Observer's Perspective
Dr. Vivek Mishra joins the Fletcher Forum Podcast to discuss the upcoming US Presidential Election. Dr. Mishra is the Deputy Director of the Observer Research Foundation's Strategic Studies Programme, where he writes on US elections and US-India relations. We discuss the election's key inflection points, as well as his perspective of Indian observers' impressions of the election.

Oct 18, 2024 • 32min
Fletcher Focus: Discussing the 6th Decolonizing International Relations Conference
In this episode, we're in conversation with Ellie Johnson and Abdullah Alharoun, Chairperson and Content Chair of this year's Decolonising International Relations Conference, scheduled to take place on the 24th and 25th of October. We discuss the nature and importance of the decolonizing exercise, the role of the conference in bridging the gaps in contemporary narratives on IR and Fletcher's own contributions to the Decolonizing exercise.

Oct 14, 2024 • 48min
Doing Development: A conversation with the 2024 D-Prize Winners
This week we're featuring a conversation with Maggie Adomako and Richard Geegbae, two of the three members of the 2024 Fletcher D-Prize winning Ongeza Zao Na Pato (OZP) team. OZP is bringing farmers beans and cow peas in Kenya to support a business-smart and environmentally sustainable transition. We even discuss Richard's new idea for how Fletcher students can help their classmates gain valuable experience in development work.

Sep 25, 2024 • 37min
Fletcher Focus: A Conference on The Global Repercussions of Russia-West Economic Warfare
Our inaugural 2024-2025 episode features members of Fletcher's Russia and Eurasia Program discussing the upcoming conference on Russian sanctions and the broader economic impacts of economic warfare resulting from the war in Ukraine. Arik Burakovsky, Assistant Director of the Russia Eurasia Program, Pavel Luzin, a fellow at the program, and Akshat Dhankher, a graduate assistant and second year MALD student at Fletcher join us to discuss how they had the idea for a conference entirely focused on sanctions against Russia.

Jun 12, 2024 • 52min
Unpacking the Aftermath of South Africa's 2024 election
With South Africa's historic elections concluding on May 29th 2024, the ANC is facing its first coalition since its inception in 1994. Michael Walsh, visiting scholar at UC Berkeley and Senior Fellow at FPRI joins us to discuss his latest article, covering the South African elections and providing a systematic framework to understand political landscapes through evaluating internal party conflict adjacent to their platforms.

May 1, 2024 • 16min
Introduction to Human Security
Second year MALD, Julia Shufro, discusses the field of human security with international security professor, Rockford Weitz. Listen to their conversation about the role of protecting civilians in conflict, considering people when creating policy, and the nexus of human rights and human security.

May 1, 2024 • 43min
Demystifying the Indian Election- With Paul Staniland and Milan Vaishnav
As the world's largest democracy, India, wraps up its election cycle, the team speaks with Milan Vaishnav, a Senior Fellow and Director of the South Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and Paul Staniland, Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago, on the theme. We delve into questions around what makes Modi, the man to beat, what do the voters care about and how the election may shape India's democracy.

Apr 26, 2024 • 27min
Self Help Groups- History and Relevance
The Self-Help Group movement that began in South Asia has now proliferated across developing countries of the world. Seen as a means of women's financial and social empowerment, SHGs have been a popular development intervention. In this conversation with Dr. Michael Woolcock, Lead Social Scientist at the World Bank and Adjunct Lecturer at the Harvard Kennedy School, we delve into the history of SHGs, their desired and sometimes undesired outcomes and their relevance today.

Apr 9, 2024 • 47min
Intersections of Linguistic Interplay and Exchange in Taiwan
This podcast features Jordan Strouse, a 3rd year Fulbright grantee in Taiwan who joins the forum to comment on the intersections of linguistic interplay and exchange in Taiwan. The conversation also includes his commentary on Taiwan's bilingual 2030 policy and the challenges of teaching English in an environment where students might speak any of 5 languages natively


