As governments confront many challenges that are global in scale, leaders find they must cooperate in responding to financial, climate, terrorism and other crises. As a result, a global audience has developed keen interest in how and why nations select their leaders. On one hand, citizens expect sensible and collective action, transparency and fair representation; on the other hand, citizens and leaders fret about compromising security, sovereignty or loss of control. Diplomats and global organizations like the United Nations aim to achieve a balance, even as global communications allow citizens in democracies or authoritarian states to steer attention to issues. Attention to citizen demands and multilateral cooperation contribute to stability.

Peru May Join Latin America’s Populist Tilt to Left

Latin America’s opponents of globalization are on the rise
David Luhnow
January 18, 2006

David's Friend Goliath

Anti-US rhetoric is not as useful as the US itself
Michael Mandelbaum
January 20, 2006

Ramallah’s Virtual Reality

Palestinians express feelings that can’t be ignored, but must confront reality
Henryk M. Broder
January 27, 2006

Rock of Agents

Recent spying allegations against Britain could harm civil society and hopes for Russian democracy
Nick Paton Walsh
January 30, 2006

Poor Nations Complain Not All Charity Reaches Victims

After raising funds for disasters, relief organizations are pressured to spend money on those causes
Stephanie Strom
February 1, 2006