Publications

Thought-Provoking Engagement and Exchange

Faculty at the Josef Korbel School share their research widely in books, articles, and commentary. Through their published work, faculty engage with ideas and other experts to shape academic and public discourse on the most important and timely issues in global and public affairs.

Displaying 305 - 312 of 379
Filter
Date of Publication
From insights to action: Gender equality in the wake of COVID-19

Reports & Briefs

Ginette Azcona, Antra Bhatt, Jessamyn Encarnacion, Juncal Plazaola-Castaño, Papa Seck, Silke Staab, and Laura Turque

From Joseph Kony to Nile Perch: Complex Links Hook Armed Conflict to Fisheries

Article | Sarah Glaser

Fisheries are complex systems, so numerous factors like human population growth, climate change, and changing lake chemistry come into play.

Green Cape 2040: Towards a Smarter Grid

Reports & Briefs

Camp, H., Hedden, S., Bohl,D., Petersen, A., and Moyer, J.D. (2015). "Green Cape 2040: Towards a Smarter Grid."

Gridlocked: A Long-term Look at South Africa's Electricity Sector

Reports & Briefs

Hedden, S. (2015). "Gridlocked: A long-term look at South Africa's electricity sector." Institute for Security Studies and Frederick S. Pardee Center for International Futures, Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver. Denver.

Half a degree and rapid socioeconomic development matter for heatwave risk

Article | Brian O'Neill

While every society can be exposed to heatwaves, some people suffer far less harm and recover more quickly than others from their occurrence.

Highway or Byway: South Africa's NDP 2030 Vision

Reports & Briefs

Cilliers, J. and Camp, H. (2013). “Highway or Byway? The National Development Plan 2030.”

How Dangerous Was Kargil? Nuclear Crises in Comparative Perspective.

Article | Julia Macdonald

The Kargil War was what we term a ‘staircase crisis’—a crisis that exhibited incentives for first nuclear use, but in which the level of escalation was relatively controllable by the leaders involved.

How to Think About Nuclear Crises

Article | Julia Macdonald

How dangerous are nuclear crises? What dynamics underpin how they unfold?