Plus analysis on how open source software shapes AI policy and what’s next for Afghanistan.
The societal benefits of postsecondary prison education Incarcerated individuals who enroll in postsecondary education programs are 48% less likely to be reincarcerated than those who do not, and the odds of being employed post-release are 12% higher for individuals who participate in any type of correctional education. Alexandra Gibbons and Rashawn Ray explain financial aid constraints for students pursuing higher education in prison. Read more |
After Afghanistan, where next? Biden must show resoluteness How the Biden administration reformulates its Afghanistan policy and reassures others that America is not weak and irresolute will be critical moving forward. Michael O’Hanlon discusses how the president and his team can approach the next phase of U.S. counterterrorism and foreign policy around Afghanistan. Read more |
More on Afghanistan Pakistan’s problematic victory in Afghanistan. Bruce Riedel writes about the role Pakistan has played in the Taliban’s quick takeover of Afghanistan, arguing that the fiasco in Kabul should be a wakeup call for Washington to get more involved with Islamabad. The Taliban retakes Afghanistan. In a new episode of the Brookings Cafeteria podcast, Vanda Felbab-Brown offers insights on the forces that have shaped Afghanistan and what to expect moving forward. Will Afghanistan become a terrorist haven again? In his op-ed for Foreign Affairs, Daniel Byman explains why Afghanistan’s reversion to its pre-9/11 role as a safe haven for jihadi terrorism is unlikely. | Help support Brookings with a donation Brookings is committed to making its high-quality, independent policy research free to the public. Please consider making a contribution today to our Annual Fund to support our experts' work. | The conclusions and recommendations of any Brookings publication are solely those of its author(s), and do not reflect the views of the Institution, its management, or its other scholars. |
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