How New Technologies Are Changing Global Security
| by Moyara Ruehsen
Professor Moyara Ruehsen recently shared some insights into how AI, blockchain and other technologies are shifting financial crime and the skills that new professionals will need.
540 Items
| by Moyara Ruehsen
Professor Moyara Ruehsen recently shared some insights into how AI, blockchain and other technologies are shifting financial crime and the skills that new professionals will need.
| by Sierra Abukins
There has never been a greater need for constructive conversation between experts from the United States, Russia, and China—nor fewer spaces or opportunities.
| by Jason Warburg
The annual “Monterey Model” symposium featured policy and management students presenting in multiple languages on current issues related to peace and conflict transformation while student colleagues interpreted their remarks in five languages.
| by Sierra Abukins
Intermediate Russian speakers can improve their language skills while also deepening their knowledge of Russian culture, history, and politics in this 5-hour course.
| by Sierra Abukins
Just saw the Oppenheimer film and hungry for more? Our global security faculty and researchers have recommendations.
| by Jason Warburg
The Middlebury Institute’s mentor program matches students with alumni willing to provide guidance about potential career pathways.
| by Sierra Abukins
The Monterey County Weekly recently featured a story about a conference on nuclear disarmament that included students from Hiroshima, Monterey, LA and Tokyo.
| by Mark Anderson
Unprecedented research conducted by the Center for the Blue Economy and Monterey Bay Aquarium with support from Institute students found sea otters drive about $3 million in local ecotourism.
Nuclear nonproliferation researcher Masako Toki writes in the Bulletin for the Atomic Scientists that the dwindling number of atomic bomb survivors—known as hibakusha—have an important role for teaching the next generation of nonproliferation experts.